Viruses and Public Health
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Transcript Viruses and Public Health
Viruses and Public Health
Viruses are responsible for >50% of
infectious diseases.
What
are they? Are they alive?
Infectious diseases are those that are
caused by microbes
Bacteria,
viruses, a few fungi, and a few
protists
What are significant diseases? How are they
spread? What is our protection?
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Viruses
Most biologists do not consider viruses to
be alive because
They
are not made of cells.
They cannot reproduce without a host cell.
Plus other excuses.
Not made of cells
This
means that antibiotics which attack cell
function are of no use. Certain drugs work.
Obligate intracellular parasites
Must
reproduce within a host cell.
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What are viruses made of
Nucleic acid
Even
though they aren’t cells, they still need a
genetic blueprint so they can reproduce.
Viruses may have ds DNA, ss DNA, ds RNA,
or ssRNA, depending on the virus.
A covering called a capsid
A layer
of protein which protects the nucleic
acid and gives the virus its shape.
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Viral size and shape
Viruses range from 30 nm to 300 nm
Ribosomes are about 30 nm
The smallest known bacteria are
about 200 nm
Viral shapes:
helical, polyhedral, and complex
http://www.glencoe.com/qe/images/b136/q4323/ch18_0_a.jpg; www.blc.arizona.edu/.../
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Figures/Icos_Virus.GIF; http://www.foresight.org/Updates/Update48/Images/T4Schematic.jpg
Examples of virus shapes
Ebola
Adenovirus
http://www-cgi.cnn.com/HEALTH/9604/16/nfm/ebola.levine/ebola.reston.large.jpg;
http://www.virology.net/Big_Virology/EM/Adeno-FD.jpg
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Life Cycle of a virus
http://web.uct.ac.za/depts/mmi/jmoodie/flu2life.gif
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Can you catch any virus?
We think that every living thing, bacteria
included, has a virus that infects it.
But viruses are specific
Infect
only certain types of organisms
Infect only certain types of cells
Attachment requires a match of molecules
between the virus and host cell.
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How do you grow viruses?
Can’t grow them in a Petri dish! Need a
host cell.
Animal models or human volunteers
Ethical
Eggs
In
limits re using humans
bulk for vaccination material
Cell culture
Viruses
grow on cells living in a dish
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Ways to grow viruses
http://www.fao.org/ag/againfo/foto/egg-facts.gif
news.bbc.co.uk/.../_230333_cell_culture_300.jpg
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How do viruses cause disease?
Viruses damage cells
Viruses
use host cells energy
Viruses break open host cells when they
multiply
Cells die
Your immune system kills infected cells
White
blood cells called T cells kill infected
cells before too many viruses multiply
Viruses cause birth defects
Virus
kills important cells in embryo
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Do viruses cause cancer?
Some do.
Can’t
prove causation because can’t infect
humans with viruses to cause cancer.
Hepatitis B: liver cancer
Kaposi’s sarcoma virus: cancer with AIDS
Papilloma virus: genital warts and cervical
cancer
Epstein-Bar virus: mononucleosis and
Burkitt’s lymphoma
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Lots of familiar diseases are
caused by viruses
Measles, chicken pox, polio
Herpes, AIDS, Mono
SARS, West Nile
Influenza, smallpox, rabies
Common cold, Warts
Parvo, 24 hour stomach “flu”
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How do you catch diseases?
Bacterial, viral, and other microbes
Microbes that cause disease are found
somewhere: a reservoir
Could
be other humans, could be animals,
could be soil or water.
To cause disease, microbe must get from
the reservoir to you
If
you are part of the cycle of infection,
microbe must then get to others.
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Transmission
Microbe needs to get from reservoir to you.
Contact
Direct contact: touching, kissing, sex, endogenous
spread (one part of you to another)
Indirect contact, via fomites (inanimate objects)
Droplet transmission:
less than 1 meter thru air
http://students.washington.edu/grant/random
/sneeze.jpg
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Transmission-2
Vehicles
Water: various viruses, bacteria,
protozoa, mostly that cause diarrhea
and enter water supply.
Food: unpasteurized or contaminated
food, either improperly grown,
processed, or prepared.
Airborne: microbes attached to dust,
skin flakes, dried mucus become
aerosols, travel thru air.
http://www.kennethkeith.com/milkgreeceb.JPG
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Transmission-3
Vectors
Typically arthropods (insects, ticks)
Mechanical vectors: simply spread disease,
e.g. houseflies walking on feces, spread
germs to humans.
Biological: pathogen goes through part of life
cycle in vector
Viruses or protozoa that reproduce within
mosquito, e.g. Major method for spread of
zoonoses.
http://www.doktordoom.com/images/Tick.jpg
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Locally and Internationally
important diseases
The Commonplace
Minor
respiratory diseases, i.e. common cold,
spread by contact.
Digestive system: contaminated food, water;
unhygienic bathroom behavior and contact.
Regional
The highest incidence of tularemia, a
bacterial disease, is the Ozark Mts.
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The Embarrassing: STDs
Syphilis,
gonorrhoea, chlamydia all bacterial
diseases that can be cured with antibiotics.
Herpes, genital warts, HIV are viral
Herpes is forever, wart virus causes cancer, HIV
causes death
The
spread of STDs can be controlled by
change in behavior.
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International
HIV
is ravaging parts of the world, especially
Africa. Social, political, economic factors are
all involved.
Malaria, caused by a protozoan, is still #1
cause of misery throughout the world.
Lack of clean water, whether from poverty or
natural disaster, results in fecal-oral
transmission; bacterial diseases such as
typhoid fever, cholera, E. coli and viral
diseases like Hepatitis A.
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New and Emerging Diseases:
challenge for scientists
AIDS since 1970s
Legionnaire’s disease since 1976
Ebola just as recent
West Nile spread to and thru US in last 5
years
Ready for next flu pandemic? Is bird flu it?
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