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Viruses called bacteriophages can infect and set in motion a genetic

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VIRUSES. Introduction. DISCOVERY OF VIRUSES. • The discovery of viruses resulted from the search for the infectious agent causing tobacco mosaic plants and gives their leaves a mosaic coloration. ADOLF MEYER. • A German scientist demonstrated that the disease was contagious and proposed that the infectious agent was an unusually small bacterium that could not be seen with a microscope. • He successfully transmitted the disease by spraying sap from infected plants onto the healthy ones. • Using a microscope, he examined the sap and was unable to identify a microbe. D. IVANOWSKY. • 1890: A Russian scientist proposed that tobacco mosaic disease was caused by a bacterium that was either too small to be trapped by a filter or that produced a filterable toxin. • To remove bacteria, he filtered sap from infected leaves. • Filtered sap still transmitted disease to healthy plants. MARTINUS BEIJERINCK. • 1897: A Dutch microbiologist proposed that the disease was caused by a reproducing particle much smaller and simpler than a bacterium. • He ruled out the theory that a filterable toxin caused the disease by demonstrating that the infectious agent in filtered sap could reproduce. • Plants were sprayed with filtered sap from disease plants > sprayed plants developed tobacco mosaic disease >sap from newly infected plants was used to infect others. WENDELL. M. STANLEY. • 1935:An American Biologist, from the Rockefeller Institute, crystallized the infectious particle now known as Tobacco Mosaic Virus(TMV). • The purified virus precipitated in the form of crystals. • He was able to show that viruses can be better regarded as chemical matter, than as living organisms. • Crystals retained the ability to infect healthy tissue. • Subsequent determination of chemical nature of TMV: Protein in combo with nucleic, TMV were rods 300 nanometers long, TMV was RNA surrounded by protein coat. GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS. • Obligatory Intracellular Parasites. • Protein coated fragments of DNA or RNA that have become detached from the genomes of cells. Because they cannot replicate on their own, they are not organisms. • Viruses are generally host-specific. [...]... within a certain host • Should be as many viruses as there are kinds of organisms VIRUS-HOST RANGE • The host range of a virus is the spectrum of host cells the virus can infect • Some viruses have broad host ranges which may include several species(e.g swine flu and rabies) • Some viruses have host ranges so narrow that they can: • infect only one species(e.g phages of E.coli • Infect only a single... ID, and cultivation • Bacteriophages are easily grown on bacterial cultures • This is the reason why so much of what is known of viral multiplication has come from from bacteriophage GROWING VRUSES IN THE LAB • • • • • Plaque method: Bacteriophages Living animals: Animal viruses Embryonated eggs: Animal viruses Cell cultures: Animal viruses (CPE) Primary cell lines, Diploid cell lines, and continuous... polymerase produced by the host • 2 RNA ->RNA: Since host cells lack the enzyme to copy RNA, most RNA viruses contain a gene that codes for RNA replicase • RNA replicase is an enzyme that uses viral RNA as a template to produce complementary RNA • 3 RNA ->DNA ->RNA: Some RNA viruses encode reverse transcriptase, an enzyme that transcribes DNA from an RNA template MULTIPLICATION OF BACTERIOPHAGES. .. double-stranded RNA or single-stranded RNA • Are organized as single nucleic acid molecules that are either linear or circular • May have as few as four genes or as many as several hundred CAPSID AND ENVELOPE • Capsid: Protein coat that encloses the viral genome • It’s structure may be rod-shaped, polyhedral or complex • Composed of many capsomeres: protein subunits made from only one or a few types... use an elaborate tailpiece to inject DNA into the host cell • Once the viral genome is inside its host cell, it commandeers the host’s resources and reprograms the cell to copy the viral genes and manufacture capsid protein • Three possible patterns of viral genome replication: • 1 DNA >DNA: If viral DNA is doublestranded, DNA replication resembles that of cellular DNA, and the virus uses DNA polymerase... COMPLEX VIRUSES • Bacteriophage • Capsid(head) is polyhedral, tail sheath is helical • Tail fibers, plate and pin TAXONOMY OF VIRUSESViruses are not organisms and are not classified in the kingdoms of life • Regarded as self-replicating portions of the genomes of organisms • In comparison to living things, vruses are acellular(not cells and do not consist of cells), do not metabolize energy, no photosynthesis,... photosynthesis, cell respiration or ferment • Viruses are cell parasites as they infect organisms at all taxonomic levels • Oldest classification based on symptoms • ICTV group vruses into families, based on: • Nucleic acid type, strategy for replication, and morphology • E.G.: Family= ends with viridae • Genus= virus ISOLATION, CULTIVATION, AND IDENTIFICATION • Cannot replicate outside a living cell: poses... protein ENVELOPE • Membrane that cloaks some viral capsid: • Helps viruses infect their host • Derived from host cell membrane which is usually virus-modified and contains proteins and glycoproteins of viral origin GENERAL MORPHOLOGY • • • • Helical viruses Polyhedral viruses Enveloped viruses Complex viruses HELICAL VIRUSES • Resemble long rods • Maybe rigid or flexible • Viral Genome found inside a. .. cylindrical capsid • E.G.: Ebola virus and Rabies virus POLYHEDRAL VIRUSES • Many-sided Capsid is in the shape of icosahedron( a polyhedral with 20 triangular faces) • E.G.: Adenovirus, and poliovirus ENVELOPED VIRUSES • Roughly spherical • Enveloped-helical or enveloped polyhedral viruses • Enveloped helical = Influenzae virus • Enveloped polyhedral = Herpes simplex virus COMPLEX VIRUSES • Bacteriophage... cell lines VIRAL MULTIPLICATION • Viruses are nonliving particles that reproduce only inside specific host cells • Exhibit many patterns of viral life cycle, but they generally include: • Coopting host ceel’s resources to: • Manufacture capsid protein, • Assemble newly produced viral nucleic acid and capsomeres • Several mechanisms used to infect host cells with viral DNA • For example, T-even phages . double-stranded DNA, single- stranded DNA, double-stranded RNA or single-stranded RNA. • Are organized as single nucleic acid molecules that are either linear. precipitated in the form of crystals. • He was able to show that viruses can be better regarded as chemical matter, than as living organisms. • Crystals

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