viral replication

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Viral Replication Viruses Part II

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Viral Replication. Viruses Part II. Viral Replication. It was not until the 1950s that scientists were able to isolate and identify how viruses multiplied in a host Much of the early research was performed using a bacteriophage (or a virus that infects only a bacteria) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Viral  Replication

Viral ReplicationViruses Part II

Page 2: Viral  Replication

Viral Replication• It was not until the 1950s that

scientists were able to isolate and identify how viruses multiplied in a host

• Much of the early research was performed using a bacteriophage (or a virus that infects only a bacteria)• Specifically, scientists studied T4

bacteriophage that infected the E. coli bacteria

Page 3: Viral  Replication

Lytic Cycle• Virulence – the ability of a pathogen to affect cells

• Some viruses are nonvirulent to specific types of cells• Ex: human could consume the leaves of a tobacco

plant with TMV and not become infected

• Scientists call the activity of a virulent virus the lytic cycle

Page 4: Viral  Replication

Lytic Cycle During the lytic cycle:

• the virus invades the cell, • uses the resources of the

host cell to produce multiple copies of the viral nucleic acid,

• destroys the host cell• Releases new virions

(complete virus particle) into the environment

Page 5: Viral  Replication

Lytic cycle Steps

• Step 1 Attachment• The glycoprotein (“spikes”) on the outside

of a virus capsid adhere to the cell wall/cell membrane of its intended host

Page 6: Viral  Replication

Lytic cycle – Step 2

• Step 2 – Entry • Once attached to the exterior of the host cell,

enzymes begin to break it down and the core (DNA/RNA) is injected into the host cell

Page 7: Viral  Replication

Lytic cycle• Step 3 – Replication and Transcription

• Using the cell’s enzymes and organelles, the virus begins to produce multiple copies of the viral nucleic acid, mRNA, enzymes, and proteins

Page 8: Viral  Replication

Lytic cycle • Step 4 – Assembly

• The virus proteins form capsids around the replicated viral DNA/RNA, forming new virions

Page 9: Viral  Replication

Lytic Cycle• Step 5 – Release

• Eventually, the resources of the host cell are used up, the organelles being used wear out, and the enzymes coded by the virus cause the cell to lysis or burst open

• This releases the new virions into the environment and potentially infecting new host cells

Page 10: Viral  Replication

Lytic cycle

• Certain bacteriophages, human polio, influenza are relatively virulent → meaning they can infect one cell and complete the lytic cycle within 30 minutes

Page 11: Viral  Replication

Lysogenic cycle• Not all viruses destroy the host cell immediately after the

entry phase…

• During the lysogenic cycle, a virus that enters a cell may remain inactive (or latent) for long periods of time

• While in the latent stage, the virus has inserted its genome into the host’s DNA and it is replicated each time the cell undergoes cell division

• Essentially, the lysogenic viruses reproduce each time the cell divides so that all new cells have the virus in them

Page 12: Viral  Replication

Lysogenic Viruses A lysogenic virus may lay dormant

until stimuli (like UV radiation, temperature change, or other agents) cause it to become virulent and undergo the lytic cycle

Page 13: Viral  Replication

Other Kinds of Viruses Persistent infections – the host cell

does not go through the lytic cycle but slowly releases virus particles

Transforming viruses – significantly alter the cell’s metabolism by adding new genetic info but does not destroy the cell