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virus

infectious particles that pass through bacterial filters

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genome, capsid, envelope

viral anatomy

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capsid

protein coat surrounding the genome

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envelope

made of phospholipid bilayer - called envelope viruses

-membrane that surrounds the capsid

-has vital proteins (spikes) and host proteins

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nucleocapsid

some viruses only have capsid and nucleic acid

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virion

non-cellular microbe that has taken over host cell

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virion

non-cellular microbe that has taken over host cell

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obligate parasites

viruses are …… …… and are incapable of growth without a host

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virulent

kill the host cell quickly, usually by lysis

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temperate

may remain hidden and dormant for a very long time in their hosts

-causes disease slowly

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yes

can viruses have single or double stranded DNA or RNA

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no

do viruses have ribosomes

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no

do viruses have metabolism?

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bacteriophage

viruses that infect bacteria

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adsorption, penetration, synthesis, assembly, release

stages of the lytic cycle

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bacteriophage plaques

since bacteriophages are non-motile, bacteriophages will form circular plaques in a lawn of bacteria, each plaque is formed by a single bacteriophage infecting a single bacterium

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lysogenic life cycle

some bacteriophages, as an alternative to lytic growth, can “hide” in the host and lie dormant (temperate)

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adsorption, penetration, integration of prophage, growth, viral induction, synthesis, assembly, release

lysogenic life cycle stages

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provirus

integration into the genome

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lysis

cell breaks open, releasing all virions at once

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budding

virions bud off the infected cell

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animal viruses

budding is specific to

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cold and influenza

viral respiratory tract infections, rapidly infectious, rapidly contagious

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airborne droplets

the cold and flu are transmitted by

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epithelial cells in the nose, throat, and lungs

cold and flu infect

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rhinovirus

“nose virus” most common cold

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specific

infection grants immunity but only to that ………. cold

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3

how many flu varieties are there

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A

most seasonal flu type

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proteins

influenza has …… on the viral surface

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N spike, H spike

name the 2 protein spikes on the influenza viral surface

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8 strand RNA

give the details of the influenza genome

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changes

the influenza virus population regularly goes through ……

-gradual mutational change

-prior years immunity doesn’t protect against new versions

-this is why we have yearly epidemics

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pandemic

an extremely widespread and deadly epidemic

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partial

most years we have ……. immunity to the new versions of the flu virus

-our antibodies can recognize some of the new influenza virus but not all

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antigenic shift

sometimes, the change to the flu antigens is so large that we lose all immunity

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neuraminidase inhibitors

given to those with the flu who are at high risk of complications

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neuraminidase inhibitors

blocks the maturation/spread of the virus

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inactivated virus vaccine

kills flu virus particles, given by injection, can be given greater than 6 months of age

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live attenuated virus vaccine

mutated virus, incapable of causing the flu, only for healthy people ages 2-49: can cause disease with weak immune systems

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viral gastroenteritis/stomach flu

a viral infection of the stomach/intestines, can be caused by a large number of different viruses

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fecal to oral

how is the stomach flu transmitted?

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rotavirus

one large number of viruses that can cause viral gastroenteritis

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double stranded RNA

rota virus genome is

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naked

rotavirus is a …. virus making it resistant to soap and sensitive to alcohol

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triple

rotavirus has a ….. capsid

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hydration

rotavirus treatment

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rotashield

based on a sheep virus related to human rotavirus, granted immunity, rare complication of intussusception

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rotateq

based on a cow virus related to human rotavirus, causes a mild infection with no symptoms, grants immunity, no signs of complications

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retrovirus

HIV/AIDs is a …..

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envelope

HIV is an …….. virus

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reverse transcriptase

enzyme that converts RNA to DNA

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macrophages, T cells, dendritic cells

HIV infects

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antibodies

when HIV attacks T cells, it stops the creation of

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opportunistic infections

when T cell population decreases, the chance of …… …… increases

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200

less than …… T cells is considered AIDS

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A

which category of AIDS is least severe?

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HAART

how to treat HIV

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protease inhibitors

blocks enzymes needed for virion maturation

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reverse transcriptase inhibitors

blocks viral reproduction

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reverse transcriptase inhibitors, protease inhibitors

name the two major drugs HAART uses to treat HIV

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CCR5

name the mutation that is HIV immune

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CCR5

lacks protein used for HIV adsorption

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prion

infectious proteins with no DNA or RNA, change the folding of proteins with the same sequence

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transmissible spongiform encephalopathy

central nervous system cells die due to prions causing

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prion diseases

spread by ingesting or having blood contact with infected nervous tissue

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none

treatment for kuru/prion diseases

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prions

hardy, pass through filters, and can resist autoclave temperatures

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