a11a bactviruses

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Viruses: Morphology and Bacteriophage Life Cycle Figure 13.1 What is a Virus and How is it Built? •Obligate intracellular parasites •Morphology of a Virion •Size (1/1000 to 1/4 size of bacterium) •Composition •RNA vs DNA •Capsid, envelope, spikes •Shapes •helical, polyhedral (isometric) , complex •Host ranges and grouping of viruses •Bacterial, plant, animal viruses •Propagation and study of viruses •Bacteriophage plaques on a lawn •Animal virus propagation •Identifying viruses Bacterial Virus Life Cycles (DNA viruses) •Lytic Cycle (e.g. T4 bacteriophage) •Attachment •Penetration/Entry •Biosynthesis •Assembly •Lysis/Release •Lysogenic Life Cycle Viruses cannot reproduce outside of a cell. They are extremely small and come in three different shapes. They are very specific for their hosts. In the lytic cycle of bacteriophages, they enter, reproduce, and leave.

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Page 1: a11a BactViruses

Viruses: Morphology and Bacteriophage Life Cycle

Figure 13.1

What is a Virus and How is it Built?•Obligate intracellular parasites

•Morphology of a Virion•Size (1/1000 to 1/4 size of bacterium)•Composition

•RNA vs DNA•Capsid, envelope, spikes

•Shapes•helical, polyhedral (isometric) , complex

•Host ranges and grouping of viruses•Bacterial, plant, animal viruses

•Propagation and study of viruses•Bacteriophage plaques on a lawn•Animal virus propagation•Identifying viruses

Bacterial Virus Life Cycles (DNA viruses)•Lytic Cycle (e.g. T4 bacteriophage)

•Attachment•Penetration/Entry•Biosynthesis•Assembly•Lysis/Release

•Lysogenic Life CycleViruses cannot reproduce outside of a cell. They are extremely small and come in three different shapes. They are very specific for their hosts. In the lytic cycle of bacteriophages, they enter, reproduce, and leave.

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Viruses

Figure 13.1

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Helical Viruses

Figure 13.4a, b

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Polyhedral (Isometric) Viruses

Figure 13.2a, b

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Some Viruses Have a Phospholipid Envelope

Membrane proteinsform “spikes” that stick out from membrane

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Complex Viruses

Figure 13.5a

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Viral Taxonomy

• “Family” names end in -viridae

• “Genus” names end in -virus

• Viral species: A group of viruses sharing the same genetic information and ecological niche (host). Common names are used for species

• Subspecies are designated by a number

• Herpesviridae

• Herpesvirus

• Human herpes virus 1, HHV 2, HHV 3

• Retroviridae

• Lentivirus

• Human Immunodeficiency Virus 1, HIV 2

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Viruses: Morphology and Bacteriophage Life Cycle

Figure 13.1

What is a Virus and How is it Built?•Obligate intracellular parasites

•Morphology of a Virion•Size (1/1000 to 1/4 size of bacterium)•Composition

•RNA vs DNA•Capsid, envelope, spikes

•Shapes•helical, polyhedral, complex

•Host ranges and grouping of viruses•Bacterial, plant, animal viruses

•Propagation and study of viruses•Bacteriophage plaques on a lawn•Animal virus propagation•Identifying viruses

Bacterial Virus Life Cycles (DNA viruses)•Lytic Cycle (e.g. T4 bacteriophage)

•Attachment•Penetration/Entry•Biosynthesis•Assembly•Lysis/Release

Viruses cannot reproduce outside of a cell. They are extremely small and come in three different shapes. They are very specific for their hosts. In the lytic cycle of bacteriophages, they enter, reproduce, and leave.

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Growing Viruses

• Viruses must be grown in living cells.

• Bacteriophages form plaques on a lawn of bacteria.

Figure 13.6

• Animal viruses may be grown in living animals, or in embryonated eggs, or in tissue culture

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Growing Viruses

• Animal and plants viruses may be grown in cell culture.

• Continuous cell lines may be maintained indefinitely.

Figure 13.8

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• Cytopathic effects

• Serological tests

• Detect antibodies against viruses in a patient

• Use antibodies to identify viruses in neutralization tests, viral hemagglutination, and Western blot

• Nucleic acids

• RFLPs (DNA fingerprint)

• PCR (selectively amplifying and detecting key sequences)

Virus Identification

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Viruses: Morphology and Bacteriophage Life Cycle

Figure 13.1

What is a Virus and How is it Built?•Obligate intracellular parasites

•Morphology of a Virion•Size (1/1000 to 1/4 size of bacterium)•Composition

•RNA vs DNA•Capsid, envelope, spikes

•Shapes•helical, polyhedral, complex

•Host ranges and grouping of viruses•Bacterial, plant, animal viruses

•Propagation and study of viruses•Bacteriophage plaques on a lawn•Animal virus propagation•Identifying viruses

Bacterial Virus Life Cycles (DNA viruses)•Lytic Cycle (e.g. T4 bacteriophage)

•Attachment•Penetration/Entry•Biosynthesis•Assembly•Lysis/Release

Viruses cannot reproduce outside of a cell. They are extremely small and come in three different shapes. They are very specific for their hosts. In the lytic cycle of bacteriophages, they enter, reproduce, and leave.

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Figure 13.10.1

Attachment:Phage attaches to host cell.

Penetration:Phage pnetrates host cell and injects its DNA.

Biosynthesis: Transcription/Translation andViral chromosome replication

1

2

3

Bacterial cell wall

Bacterial chromosome

Capsid DNA

Capsid

Sheath

Tail fiber

Base platePin

Cell wall

Tail

Plasma membrane

Sheath contracted

Tail core

Lytic Lifecycle of a Bacteriophage I

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Figure 13.10.2

4 Maturation/Assembly:Viral components are assembled into virions.

Tail

5 Release:Host cell lyses and new virions are released.

DNA

Capsid

Tail fibers

Lytic Lifecycle of a Bacteriophage II

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Lytic Life Cycle Overall

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The Lytic and Lysogenic Cycles

Figure 13.12

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Viruses: Morphology and Bacteriophage Life Cycle

Figure 13.1

What is a Virus and How is it Built?•Obligate intracellular parasites

•Morphology of a Virion•Size (1/1000 to 1/4 size of bacterium)•Composition

•RNA vs DNA•Capsid, envelope, spikes

•Shapes•helical, polyhedral, complex

•Host ranges and grouping of viruses•Bacterial, plant, animal viruses

•Propagation and study of viruses•Bacteriophage plaques on a lawn•Animal virus propagation•Identifying viruses

Bacterial Virus Life Cycles (DNA viruses)•Lytic Cycle (e.g. T4 bacteriophage)

•Attachment•Penetration/Entry•Biosynthesis•Assembly•Lysis/Release

•Lysogenic Life CycleViruses cannot reproduce outside of a cell. They are extremely small and come in three different shapes. They are very specific for their hosts. In the lytic cycle of bacteriophages, they enter, reproduce, and leave.