Transcript VIRUSES
VIRUSES
Viruses are not
considered ALIVE
because they are:
– Acellular (not made of
cells)
– No metabolism
– No homeostasis
– No reproduction
outside of host cell
T4 Bacteriophage- virus that
infects bacteria
So what is a virus?
Viruses are particles
made of only 2 things:
– Protein (makes up a
cover called the
capsid)
– Genetic material
(either DNA or RNA,
but not both)
Human Papillomavirus- causes
WARTS (including genital and
anal warts)
Typical Viruses
T4 Bacteriophage
Influenza virus
A virus infecting a bacterium:
Diseases caused by viruses:
Warts
Cervical cancer
Herpes simplex 1 (cold
sores)
Herpes simplex 2 (genital
sores)
Chicken pox
Shingles
Mononucleosis
Roseola
Ebola
Polio
Common cold
Rubella
Yellow fever
Encephalitis
Rabies
Measles
Mumps
Influenza
Leukemia
HIV
The only hope you
have if you’ve been
infected with a virus is:
Your own immune
system!
Vaccinations
Weakened viruses
(attenuated) or pieces of
viruses are introduced
into the body
Your immune system (B
cells) will make
ANTIBODIESproteins that will attach
to a virus and alert your
immune system to
destroy them
Ebola
RNA virus
4 types: Ebola Zaire,
Sudan, Reston and Tai
Reston only infects
monkeys
Transmission: close
person to person contact
and body fluids
Corpses highly infectious
Zaire strain 90% fatal
Blood vessels attacked
and destroyed- patient
bleed to death internally
Ebola, continued
Doctors working
with Ebola
patients wear
“space suits” to
prevent
becoming
infected
African countries with recorded
Ebola outbreaks:
Small Pox
DNA virus
Transmitted through droplets
of water while coughing or pus
from blisters
Once used as a biological
warfare technique during
French and Indian War
Symptoms appear after 7-14
days
–
–
–
–
–
High fever
Malaise
Back ache
Headache
Followed by rash
Treatment for Small Pox
Last recorded case of
small pox on Earth
was this man in
Somalia
Treatments: IV
fluids, fever-reducers,
antibiotics to prevent
secondary bacterial
infection
Vaccination for Small Pox
Vaccination was
discontinued in US in
1972
Currently, about 50% of
US population has not
been vaccinated
Antibodies last in blood
stream for 5 to 15 years
Polio
Transmitted by water
contaminated with
polio victims’ feces
Today children
receive 4 vaccinations
between ages 2
months and 4 years
1979- polio
eradicated from US
Who is this person?
Polio
total number of cases
reported world-wide
on May 12, 2005:
155
In the 1950,
summertime was
scary for parents
because many
children became
infected with polio
Symptoms of Polio
-in 95% of cases, there are
NO symptoms
-flu
-diarrhea
-fever
-sore throat
-meningitis
-paralysis
Dr. Jonas Salk:
developed polio
vaccine in 1955
Dr. Albert
Sabin
developed the
ORAL polio
vaccine in 1957
Viruses and Plants
Viruses can infect
bacteria, fungi and
plants as well as
animals
This is the Tobacco
Mosaic Virus
Herpes
Genital warts
Herpes
50-80% of American Population is infected with
Herpes Simplex 1 (cold sores, mouth lesions)
At least 20% of American population infected
with Herpes Simplex 2 (genital herpes)
NO CURE!!!!!
As yet, no vaccine, but it is being studied
Transmission: skin to skin contact
Mouth herpes can be transmitted to a person’s
genitals, and vice versa
Recurrences happen about 4 times per year, and
are triggered by stress, fatigue, diet, skin irritation
Chicken Pox
Measles
Mumps