1 / 20

Viruses

Viruses . Lytic vs. Lysogenic . Vaccines. First made was in 1700’s- fight smallpox Help prevent viral infections, but they cannot cure most viral infection Some recently-developed drugs do combat some viruses, mostly by interfering with viral nucleic acid synthesis.

foster
Download Presentation

Viruses

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Viruses

  2. Lytic vs. Lysogenic

  3. Vaccines • First made was in 1700’s- fight smallpox • Help prevent viral infections, but they cannot cure most viral infection • Some recently-developed drugs do combat some viruses, mostly by interfering with viral nucleic acid synthesis. • AZT interferes with reverse transcriptase of HIV. • Acyclovir inhibits herpes virus DNA synthesis.

  4. WHAT IS HIV?? • “Human Immunodeficiency Virus” • A unique type of virus (a retrovirus) • Invades the helper T cells in the body of the host • Preventable, managable but not curable

  5. WHAT IS AIDS ??? • “Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome” • HIV is the virus that causes AIDS • Disease limits the body’s ability to fight infection due to reduced helper T cells. • Patients predisposed to multiple opportunistic infections leading to death.

  6. Stage 1 - Primary • Short, flu-like illness - occurs one to six weeks after infection • Mild symptoms • Infected person can infect other people

  7. Stage 2 - Asymptomatic • Lasts for an average of ten years • This stage is free from symptoms • There may be swollen glands • The level of HIV in the blood drops to low levels • HIV antibodies are detectable in the blood

  8. Stage 3 - Symptomatic • The immune system deteriorates • Opportunistic infections and cancers start to appear.

  9. Stage 4 - HIV  AIDS • The immune system weakens too much as CD4 cells decrease in number.

  10. Opportunistic Infections associated with AIDS • Bacterial infections • Tuberculosis (TB) • Herpes Simplex • Herpes Zoster • Vaginal candidiasis • Hairy leukoplakia • Kaposi’s sarcoma

  11. Opportunistic Infections associated with AIDS • Pneumocysticcarinii • Toxoplasmosis • Cryptococcosis • Coccidiodomycosis • Cryptosporiosis • Non hodgkin’slymphoma

  12. HAART = highly active anti-retroviral treatment

  13. Transduction • Definition: Gene transfer from a donor to a recipient by way of a bacteriophage

  14. Transduction • Types of transduction • Generalized - Transduction in which potentially any donor bacterial gene can be transferred

  15. Generalized Transduction • Infection of Donor • Phage replication and degradation of host DNA • Release of phage • Assembly of phages particles • Infection of recipient • Legitimate recombination

  16. Transduction • Types of transduction • Generalized - Transduction in which potentially any dornor bacterial gene can be transferred. • Specialized - Transduction in which only certain donor genes can be transferred

  17. gal gal bio bio gal bio gal bio bio gal Specialized TransductionLysogenic Phage • Excision of the prophage • Replication and release of phage • Infection of the recipient • Lysogenization of the recipient • Legitimate recombination also possible

  18. Transposable Genetic Elements • Definition: Segments of DNA that are able to move from one location to another • Properties • “Random” movement • Not capable of self replication • Transposition mediated by site-specific recombination • Transposase • Transposition may be accompanied by duplication

More Related