Viruses
Epidemiology
Viruses
Pathogenesis
Antibiotics
100

What are the 7 groups of viruses by Baltimore?

  1. Double stranded DNA

  2. Single stranded DNA

  3. Double stranded RNA

  4. (+) Single-stranded RNA

  5. (-) Single stranded RNA

  6. RNA retroviruses

  7. DNA pararetroviruses

100

What's the difference between pathogenicity and virulence?

Virulence is how “bad” a virus is, pathogenicity is how contagious it is.

100

 Compare and contrast Salk and Sabin vaccines.

Salk vaccines used inactivated polio, injected into patients, and the vaccine had immune cells produce IgG to fight.  Sabin used attenuated viruses, given orally, and the vaccine had immune cells created IgA and IgG to fight.

100

What are the three portals of entry?

  1. Mouth: Food-borne pathogens

  2. Respiratory tract: Airborne pathogens

3. Parental Route: Agents transmitted by vectors

100

What are some antifungal drugs?

  1. Amphotericin B: For severe, systemic fungal infection


2. Fluconazole (Diflucan) and Itraconazole (Sporanox)

Targets fungal version of cholesterol.

200

How do bacteriophages replicate?

  1. Host recognition 

  2. Attachment

  3. Genome entry

  4. Assembly of virions

  5. Exit and transmission

200

Father of Epidemiology? What was his initial study?

John Snow. Advocated for removal of water pumps to get rid of cholera. He wanted to do this because he made a map of infection/deaths, and he saw that many of them were around the pump.

200

What is CRISPR-Cas 9? What do we use it for, and what are some ethical concerns?

Bacterial defense system against bacteriophage.

  • It’s for gene editing. Some ethical concerns are that designer babies could be in our future, or for malicious things like eugenics. Also can help cure sickle cell anemia. 

200

What are the 2 main bacterial toxins?

  1. Exotoxins: Proteins produced by various types of bacteria ; kill host cells and obtains their nutrients

2. Endotoxins: Part of lipopolysaccharide of Gram- bacteria ; can hyperactivate host immune systems to harmful levels.

200

How do microbes protect themselves against antibiotics?

  1. Change receptor for drug

  2. Bind to drug and inactivate it (penicillinase)

  3. Change target site (changes ribosome structure)

  4. Change metabolic pathway

  5. MDR pump – multi-drug resistance pump

300

What is the difference between the lytic and lysogenetic cycle in viruses?

  1. Lytic Cycle: Phage quickly replicates, killing host cell


  1. Lysogenic Cycle: Is quiescent.

  • Integrated into cell chromosome, as a prophage

  • Can reactivate to become lytic

300

What does LD50 and ID50 mean?

LD50 is lethal dosage, and deals with the pathogenicity. ID50 is an infectious dose, deals with virulence.

300

Compare animal and plant viruses and entry strategies.

Animal viruses need a receptor, plant viruses need physical contact to transmit.

  • Receptor binding is what determines host range. Interaction between host and virus. 

300

What are the 5 main ways bacteria trick the immune system?

  1. Molecular mimicry

  2. Altering cytokine profiles

  3. Stopping programmed host cell death

  4. Interfering with autophagy

  • Autophagy is a universal innate defense mechanism to fight intracellular pathogens


  1. Redirecting ubiquitylation signals

  • MHC I and II present antigens on host cell 

Surfaces to helper T-cells. Some viral E3

Ligases can ubiquitylate the MHC molecules,

marking them for destruction via 

endosomal pathways.



  • Other E3 ligases can ubiquitylate MHC I molecules while in the endoplasmic reticulum, leading to their destruction before being placed on the cell surface.

300

What are 4 main antiviral drugs?

  1. Oseltamivir (Tamiflu): Treats influenza, inhibits neuraminidase to prevent viral spread


  1. Acyclovir (Zovirax) and Valacyclovir (Valtrex): Treats herpes simplex, chickenpox, and shingles. Interrupts viral replication by mimicking DNA building blocks.


  1. Zidovudine (Retrovir): Treats HIV; inhibits reverse transcriptase, blocking viral RNA to DNA conversion


4. Sofosbuvir (Sovaldi): Treats chronic Hepatitis-C (with other drugs); inhibits RNA polymerase to stop viral replication

400

What are the 3 bacterial defenses against host immune system?

  1. Genetic resistance: Altered receptor proteins

  2. Restriction endonucleases: Cleave viral DNA lacking methylation

  3. CRISPR: Integration of phage DNA sequences

  • Clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats ; a bacterial immune system of sorts

400

What is the MMWR report?

The Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR) is the official epidemiological science periodical published by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

400

What are animal and plant defenses against disease?

Animal and Plant Host Defenses

  1. Genetic resistance: Continually experience mutations

  2. Immune system: Innate and Adaptive immunity (Interferons and antibodies respectively).

RNA interference (RNAi): Widespread among eukaryotes and archaea

400

What are the 9 categories of microbial exotoxins?

  1. Plasma membrane disruption

  2. Cytoskeleton alterations

  3. Protein synthesis disruption

  4. Cell cycle disruption

  5. Signal transduction disruption

  6. Cell-cell adherence

  7. Vesicle traffic

  8. Exocytosis

  9. Superantigens

400

What are the 5 modes of antibiotics?

  1. Inhibition of cell wall synthesis 

  • Cell wall is weakened when cell is growing

  • EX. penicillin and cephalosporins


  1. Inhibition of protein synthesis

  • Binding to 70S ribosome

  • EX. Erythromycin, streptomycin


  1. Increase permeability of plasma membrane

  • Can have high toxicity in humans


  1. Inhibit synthesis of RNA/DNA

  • Can be very toxic


  1. Inhibition of metabolic pathways

  • Low toxicity because of the absence of this pathway in humans



500

What is the HIV replication cycle?

1. HIV binds to CD4 and CCR5 receptor on T-Helper cell

2. HIV and T-Helper membranes fuse

3. Reverse transcriptase converts viral RNA into DNA. DNA is sent to nucleus of the T-Helper cell

4. Integrase inserts viral DNA into DNA of T-Helper (establishes life long infection)

5. HIV proteins are made 

6. Virion is assembled in the cell membrane of the T-Helper cell.

7. New HIV buds out of the T-Helper cell. Protease cuts up long chains of HIV protein to help make more HIV.

500

What are the 6 transmitters of disease?

  1. Direct: Close association between infected and potential host

  2. Indirect: Spread by fomites

  3. Droplet: Transmission via airborne droplets

  4. Vehicle: Transmission by an inanimate reservoir (food, water, air)

  5. Vectors: Transmit disease by 2 general methods

  • Mechanical: Arthropod carriers pathogen on feet

  • Biological: Reproduces in vector (like malaria)

Nosocomial: Acquired as a result of a hospital stay. Affect 5-15% of all hospital patients.

500

What is the Herpes replication cycle?

  1. Envelope proteins bind to alternative receptor molecules on host cell surface.

  2. Microtubular scaffold transports the intact virions to the nucleus, where DNA is injected.

  3. DNA circularizes for transcription–can express mRNA for proteins for infection, or encodes LAT proteins to maintain latency.

  4. Assembly occurs at the nuclear membrane.

  5. Cells are released from cell via exocytosis

  6. Rapid release of virions destroys cells, causing the characteristic sores.

500

How are virulence genes found? What are they?

  • Virulence genes can be found on these islands in the chromosome, on plasmids, or on phage genomes.

  • Contain clusters of virulence genes with specific functions.

  • Originally inherited through horizontal transmission

500

Compare and contrast the use of antibiotics in people and farm animals.

Antibiotics are used to treat illness in people, to prevent infections during surgeries, for those with AIDS to prevent any infections, and are prescription regulated. and in farm animals they’re used to make them grow bigger, prevent diseases in high-density environments, promotes feeding efficiency.

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