defining sx
defining sx/bonus
random questions
random questions
100

defining sx of hepatitis 

- jaundice - hepatitis

100

defining sx of corona virus

- loss of sense of taste/smell - covid-19

100

what causes the genetic changes in shift vs drift

- drift: only 1 influenza virus enters the host cell and makes small changes when replicating and a new strain of influenza that differs slightly from the original virus exits

- shfit: 2 different strains of influenza enter the same host cell. genes and antigens from both viral types are incorporated into new virions. a new virus exits that can be very different from both original viruses.

100

What method does HIV use to exit the host

- budding

200

defining sx of morbillivirus

- koplik's spots - measles

200

defining sx of ebola

- bleeding from eyes, ear, mouth (ebolavirus disease) EVD

200

what do reverse transcriptase, integrase, and protease do

- reverse transcriptase: used to transcribe viral RNA to DNA

- integrase: used to insert the DNA copy into the host chromosome

- protease: cuts the polyprotein chain so that the virus can mature (after budding)

200

what RNA viruses indice the formation of syncytia in host cells

- HIV

- morbillivirus

- rubulavirus

- pneumovirus

300

defining sx of rubulavirus

- swollen face (chipmunk cheeks) - mumps


300

which RNA viruses have vaccines

- poliovirus

- hepatitis A virus

- rubella virus

- coronavirus

- morbillivirus

- rubulavirus

- ebola virus

- orthomyxovirus (influenza)

- rhabdovirus (rabies)

300

how does the segmented nature of influeza gene contribute to antigenic shift

allows for reassortment

300

how does +ssRNA virus replicate its genome

- genome stays in cytoplasms

- viral +ssRNA acts as mRNA & is translated on host ribosomes

- viral-encoded RNA-polymerase makes -ssRNA strand

- Used as template to copy viral genome

400

defining sx of poliovirus

- paralysis - polio

400

difference in antigenic shift and antigenic drift

drift: more gradual changes to how the influenza virus replicates. happens every 1-2 years

shift: a dramatic change. happens about once a decade or a huge one every 100 years

400

what are the 2 major glycoproteins that are on the surface of HIV envelope that allow it to attach to target cells.

gp120

gp41

400

how does -ssRNA virus replicate its genome

- genome stays in cytoplasm

- viral -ssRNA cannot act as mRNA

- viral enzyme makes +RNA copy. RNA-dependant RNA transcriptase is contained in capsid along w/ genome

- +ssRNA translated on host ribosomes

- +ssRNA also used as template to make more -ssRNA genome

500

defining sx of rubella virus

- pink/red rash that begins on face - rubella

500

what are the 2 primary antigens found on the envelope of the influenza virus

- hemagglutinin (HA)
- neuraminadase (NA)

its how they name the strains of influeza

500

what is the primary receptor on target cells that HIV binds to & what are it's co-receptors required for proper attachement to target cells

- CD4

- CCR5 & CXCR4

500

how do retrovirus replicate its genome

- reverse transcriptase makes DNA copy. viral enzyme contained in capsid

- DNA enters nucleus & integrates into chromosome

- host RNA polyerase transcribes to RNA

- host ribosomes translate to protein

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