Viral Infection
Structure of viruses
- Contain either DNA or RNA
- Capsid made up of repeated subunits of a virally encoded protein
- Icosahedral symmetry: virus consists of repeated subunits that make up equilateral triangles arranged in a symmetrical fashion
- Helical symmetry: made up of a single repeated unit
Viruses and disease
- Viral replication
- Attachment - interact with specific receptors in target cell
- Entry - endocytosis
- Uncoating - viral nucleic acid released from capsid
- Nucleic acid and protein synthesis – host ribosomes used (host polymerases may also be used) to produce new viral proteins
- Assembly - nucleic acids and proteins packaged together
- Release
- Budding - virus released with envelope derived from host cell membrane, doesn’t kill cell
- Lysis - viruses accumulates until cell bursts, killing cell
Pathogenesis
- Cell death due to immune system
- Cell proliferation - cancer
Immune response
- Cytotoxic T lymphocytes - recognise foreign cell surface proteins, signal to infected cell to commit suicide
- Neutralising antibodies - IgG, IgM
Viral persistence
- Virus may become quiescent - no active replication
- May reactivate after a period of latency
- Viruses may remain continually active for years - chronic infection
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