Cards (18)

    • HIV
      human immunodeficiency virus
      A retrovirus which infects lymphocytes
    • why is HIV a retrovirus
      it contains reverse transcriptase so can make DNA from RNA
    • how is HIV transmitted
      sexually transmitted so via body fluids
      from HIV-positive mother to baby
    • why does HIV cause life long disease
      inserts genetic Material into host cell genome
    • how HIV affects the body
      infects t helper cells which act as a host so they can't trigger an effective immune response to antigens
    • replication of HIV
      HIV enters bloostream & circulates around body
      attachment proteins bind to helper t-lymphocytes
      capsid fuses with call surface membrane & HIV RNA & enzymes enter helper t-lymphocyte
      reverse transcriptase makes complementary strand of DNA from viral RNA template & new DNA is inserted into cell's DNA
      HIV DNA in nucleus creates mRNA using cell's enzymes so new viral proteins are made
      mRNA leaves nucleus via nuclear pores & uses cell's protein synthesis mechanisms to make HIV particles
      HIV particles break away from t-cells with part of cell membrane to form lipid envelope
    • AIDS
      acquire immunodeficiency syndrome
    • how HIV leads to AIDS
      HIV kills/interferes with normal functioning of helper t-lymphocytes so there's less of them so immune system can't produce enough antibodies or memory lymphocytes so body can't produce effective immune response & becomes susceptible to other infections/disease
    • number of t-lymphocytes in healthy person
      800-1200 per mm3 of blood
    • number of t-lymphocytes in person with HIV
      200 per mm3 of blood
    • initial symptoms of AIDS
      minor infections of mucous membranes
      recurring respiratory problems
    • symptoms of AIDS as it progresses
      More susceptible to more serious infections
      chronic diarrhoea
      severe bacterial infections
      tuberculosis
    • symptoms of AIDS in the later stages
      range of serious infections
      toxoplasmosis of the brain
      candidiasis of respiratory system
    • antibiotics against bacteria
      kill bacteria by targeting bacterial enzymes & ribosomes used in metabolic reactions or by inhibiting enzymes needed for synthesis & assembly of cell walls so they are weakened so can't withstand pressure so more water enters by osmosis so cell bursts & bacterium dies
    • antibiotics against viruses
      don't work because viruses don't have any metabolic mechanisms or structures to disrupt (they use host cell)
      viruses have a protein coat rather than murein cell wall so don't have anywhere antibiotics can work
    • cure for HIV
      no cure or vaccine but antiviral drugs can be used to slow down progression of HIV and AIDS
    • best way to control HIV infection
      by reducing its spread
    • test for HIV
      ELISA test
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