Intro to Virology
History of Virology and Vaccination
Virus Classification
Virus Entry and Uncoating
Virus Replication
100

an infectious, obligate intracellular parasite comprising genetic material (RNA or DNA) surrounded by a protein coat and/or envelope derived from a host cell membrane

a Virus!!!!

100

Compare and Contrast Variolation and Vaccination

(which virus is used, who developed each method, what time periods were they used)

Variolation- smallpox (Variola virus); is possible for a human to die from variolation; developed in China around 1000BC; brought to Europe in 1721

Vaccination- cowpox (Vaccinia virus); less risks and SE than variolation; Edward Jenner is the father of vaccination; published findings in 1798 

100

Define the following terms

Virion

Genome

Capsid

Nucleocapsid

Envelope

Virion- a complete, infectious virus particle (vs a DI particle)

Genome: DNA or RNA, but not both

Capsid: protein coat composed of multiple copies of a single (or a few different) capsomere proteins surrounding/coating the genome; called this when no membrane surrounds it

Nucleocapsid: capsid + genome; called this when they are covered by a lipid membrane (envelope)

Envelope*: lipid membrane surrounding capsid

* BONUS Q: where is the envelope derived from? Give 3 possibilities  

100

What characterizes the Eclipse and Latent phases of viral replication? 

Eclipse phase - virus is not detectable during this period

  1. The virus completely disintegrates its viral structure so it can start replicating

  2. Viral genome is released inside of host cell

Latent phase - virus is detectable inside the cell, but not outside of the cell (in the supernatant)

100

T/F When we say that a virus has evolved or adapted, we mean that an individual virion gets smarter and learns how to avoid detection by the immune system. 

What kind of selection do viruses experience?

False. Virus evolution refers to a viral population and NOT the individual virion. Mutations are always happening, so there is genetic heterogeneity within the virus population. Due to selection pressure, certain mutants have more reproductive success. 

Selection Pressure: Adapting to a new species of animal or avoiding detection by the immune system

200

Compare and Contrast a Naked virus to an Enveloped virus

Naked virus - nucleic acid with a protein coat (capsid)

Enveloped virus - nucleocapsid (nucleic acid with a capsid coat) surrounded by a lipid bilayer (called an envelope) 

200

What contributions did the following people make in the history of virology?

Lady Montague

Onesimus

Edward Jenner

Lady Montague- witnessed variolation in Turkey; brought the practice to England in 1721

Onesimus- African slave brought to US; told his owner about tradition of variolation practiced in Africa; convinced Dr. Boylston to experiment with the procedure during the 1721 smallpox epidemic in Boston

Edward Jenner- used cowpox-infected scabs from milkmaids to experiment on/vaccinate children and then expose them to smallpox patients; published in 1798 


200

What kind of viruses are susceptible to common detergents? What kind are much more stable and can persist in the environment for years?

Enveloped viruses are rapidly inactivated by solvents (ex. alcohol and ether), detergents (ex. hand soap), and bile salts (most enteric animal viruses are not enveloped) Loss of envelope= loss of infectivity for all enveloped viruses


Naked viruses are NOT inactivated by common detergents and are generally much more stable in the environment 

BONUS Q: What types of disinfectant should you use to inactivate naked viruses and how long should you keep them in contact?

200

True or False- Adsorption is the first step in viral replication. In this step, extracellular viral particles exploit molecules on the surface of host cells for entry. 

False. Adsorption IS the first step in viral replication, but it refers to viruses coming in contact with the cell, not entry. Entry is the second step of viral replication. During this step, viral ligands interact with receptors and co-receptors and enter via endocytosis or fusion with the plasma membrane. 

200

Compare and Contrast :

drift vs shift

reassortment vs recombination (which one is more likely to cause a pandemic influenza virus)

drift = results in point mutations in the two major surface viral glycoproteins; H and N

shift = results in major genetic rearrangement (reassortment) of the H or N genes 

reassortment = may happen when the cell is co-infected by two or more of the same segmented viruses (occurs between related viruses)

recombination = exchange of a portion of the genome between multiple genetically related viral genomes or host cell genetic material (ex. breaking and rejoining two DNA strains or when the polymerase changes or jumps from one RNA template to another RNA molecule during replication)

300

Give examples of how viruses are not always bad and how viruses were critical for the evolution of mammals

viruses are important for aquatic ecosystems (bacteriophages lyse bacteria and provide organic matter so that new aquatic life can be supported; about 1million viruses per 1mL of seawater)

clouds are seeded by viruses

5-8% of human genome is composed of endogenous retroviral DNA

viruses were critical for mammal placental evolution (retroviral syncytin genes allowed for placental formation to happen)

300

Which human virus and animal viruses were eradicated? How and when was eradication accomplished?

  1. Smallpox was declared eradicated by WHO in 1979

    1. The first virus we purposefully eliminated from the planet

    2. Eradication program launched in 1967

  2. Rinderpest virus (cattle plague) was eradicated in 2011

    1. First eradicated animal disease

    2. Use of modified live strain of Rinderpest virus in the Plowright vaccine made this possible 

    3. Very similar virus to human measles, paramyxovirus 

300

Give examples of some small viruses and some large viruses. 

Give examples of some viruses with a helical capsid, an icosahedral capsid, and a complex capsid. 

Small virus examples: Parvovirus, Hepatitis, Papillomavirus

Large virus example: Ebolavirus, Variola Virus, Herpesvirus 

Helical: -ssRNA viruses

Simple Icosahedral: small viruses (Poliovirus)

Complex Icosahedral: (ex. Adenovirus)

Complex (not entirely helical or icosahedral in symmetry; pleomorphic [odd or not uniform in shape]): large viruses (ex. Poxviridae family)

300

Describe the two major mechanisms that viruses use to enter host cells

(1) Endocytosis is receptor-mediated. The virus binds to a ligand on the host cell surface and is then pulled into the cell coated in an endosome. 

(2) Non-endocytic route of entry- the virus fuses with the cell membrane and is brought into the cell UNcoated 

300

Stable, Evolving, Dead-end, and Resistant host describe different types of interactions of hosts and viruses. What does each refer to?

Stable-  virus is maintained in the ecosystem

Evolving- passage of a virus from "experienced populations" to naive populations in the same host species (human flu)

Dead-end- a one-way passage into a different species. Either the host dies or the virus does not transmit efficiently in the new species (ex. WNV)

Resistant host- some host species is not susceptible to infection by that virus (ex. CPV-2, FeLV or Shope's papillomavirus)

400

Compare and Contrast how viruses are different from bacteria and other microorganisms 

Viruses are much smaller than bacteria 

viruses replicate exponentially rather than by binary fission

viruses can't synthesize their own proteins, ATP, 

viruses can't be cultured on artificial medium like bacteria can

viruses aren't susceptible to antibiotics the way some bacteria are

400

What contributions did the following people make in the history of virology?

Loeffler and Frosch (1898)

Walter Reed (1901)

Ellerman/Bang/Rous (1908-1918)

Richard Shope (1931)

  1. Loeffler and Frosch- first animal virus : foot-and-mouth disease in cattle

  2. Walter Reed- discovered yellow fever virus; first virus affecting humans

  3. Ellerman/Bang/Rous- discovered that cancerous tumors in chickens were caused by viruses (Avian leukosis virus and Rous sarcoma virus)

    1. Shope and Rous - Shope’s papillomavirus in rabbits

  4. Richard Shope- (1931) isolated and identified the first influenza virus, swine influenza virus from pigs 

400

Know how viruses are classified (e.g. basis of the Baltimore system). What does + and - sense mean?

Unlike bacteria and fungi, most viruses are called by their species classification

Baltimore Classification

  1. The relation of the viral genome to the sense of  mRNA

  2. Genome: DNA or RNA?

  3. Single or double stranded?

    1. If ssRNA: positive or negative sense?

      1. +ssRNA: an RNA that can interact with a ribosome and cause proteins to be made

        1. mRNA is designated as positive (+) sense

      2. -ssRNA: an RNA that can’t interact with the ribosome to cause proteins to be made

  4. The method of replication follows 

400

RNA viruses typically uncoat at the ___ in order to replicate in the _____

DNA viruses typically uncoat at the ___ in order to replicate in the _____

*What are some exceptions?

plasma membrane (or within an endosome); cytoplasm


nuclear membrane; nucleus


Exceptions:

Retroviruses (RNA) and Influenza (RNA)- replicate in the nucleus

Poxviridae (DNA) and Asfarviridae (DNA) families - replicate in cytoplasm

400

What is reversion of virulence and how might a virus (vaccine particle) revert to virulence?

What is viral reactivation?

Reversion of Virulence -  a concern with a modified live virus (MLV) vaccine, that it may replace the missing genes and genetically recombine with the wild type virus to again become virulent 

  1. Overcome this concern by deleting multiply virulence genes instead of just a single virulence gene

Viral Reactivation - may occur when multiple inactivated (killed) viral particles can recombine genetic material to produce an infectious virion -- more theoretical than realistic, but still possible 


500

Nipah virus

1. what type of virus is it?

2. who was affected in the 1998 outbreak?

3. how was the virus spread?

4. how was the virus contained?

1.  Group V Paramyxovirus: -ssRNA coated in Nucleoportien (N) 

2. pigs and farmers in Malaysia

3. bats are the natural reservoir host- many frugivorous bat species fed in the orchard that were interspersed among the pig farms 

4. movement ban and culling 1.1 million pigs (40% swine population)

500

In 2003, a pox-like outbreak in the mid-western USA, affected 71 humans who had previous contact with pet prairie dogs. What was the cause of the outbreak traced back to? (natural host, virus identified, virus characteristics) 

The distributor had housed the pet prairie dogs with Gambian rats, the natural host of Monkeypox virus (Poxviridae family).

Poxvirus has a large linear dsDNA genome (Group 1) with an enveloped nucleocapsid. Unlike most DNA viruses, poxviruses replicate in the cytoplasm.

The smallpox vaccination prevents monkeypox disease.

500

African swine fever virus is the only member of the virus family Asfarviridae. Who did this outbreak affect and where? What are some other characteristics of this virus and how was the outbreak contained?

In China, domesticated swine herds contracted  African swine fever (highly virulent ~100% death of infected pigs) from wild boar 

  1. large dsDNA genome (group 1); replicates in cytoplasm similar to Poxivruses; virus particle contains RNA polymerase 

  2. No vaccine

  3. pigs were culled 

500

Summarize how influenza A and adenovirus/parvovirus particles enter a host cell, uncoat their genome, and enter the nucleus.

Influenza A- enters cells via endocytosis (viral HA binds to cell surface sialic acid-GP). Envelope fuses with endosome membrane and virus uncoats (nucleocapsid is released into cytoplasm). Nucleocapsid covered RNAs are small enough to enter nucleus through nuclear pore

Adenovirus- capsid disassembles at nuclear pore, genome enters nucleus

Parvovirus- virion enters host cells by CME, escape from endosome into cytoplasm, the virion is small enough to translocate through nuclear pore and enters the nucleus where it uncoats its DNA genome

500

Which viruses were released into the wild to control the invasive rabbit population in Australia?

Poxvirus- which causes myxomatosis in rabbits; released into wild in 1950

Rabbit calicivirus (rabbit hemorrhagic disease) was similarly released in the 1990s

resistance is once again developing