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Biochemistry semester 1
BMS1026 Microbiology
viruses
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Created by
Zuzanna Wielichnowska
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Cards (101)
What is a virus?
A
genetic material
surrounded by a
protein coat
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What does it mean that a virus is an obligate intracellular parasite?
It must infect a host cell to
reproduce
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Are viruses considered alive? Why or why not?
No, they cannot
grow
or produce energy
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What are the two main components of a virus?
Viral genome
and
viral capsid
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What is the function of the viral capsid?
It protects the
viral genome
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What is a viral envelope and its significance?
A
lipid bilayer
that helps
bind
to cells
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What is the classification hierarchy of viruses?
Order
-
Family
-Subfamily-
Genus
-
Species
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What are some examples of viral classifications?
Nidovirales
-
Coronaviridae
-Betacoronavirus-Sarbecovirus
Mononegavirales
-Paramyxoviridae-Morbillivirus
Mononegavirales-Pneumoviridae-Orthopneumovirus
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What percentage of child mortality in LMIC is caused by measles?
10%
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How many deaths did the 1918 influenza pandemic result in?
~20 million
deaths
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How many people were living with HIV in 2012?
34 million
people
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What is the economic impact of plant viruses?
~
£40 billion
worth of crop losses annually
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What are the two types of virus transmission?
Horizontal
and
vertical
transmission
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What are the mechanisms of virus transmission?
Direct contact
Aerosols
Contaminated surfaces
Exchange of body fluids
Insects
Contaminated food and water
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What types of treatments exist for viral diseases?
Antivirals
and
vaccinations
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Why are vaccines considered a longer-term solution?
They provide immunity against
specific
viruses
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What are the types of vaccines mentioned?
Live attenuated
(
measles
)
Inactivated
(
Rabies
)
Subunit
(
HepB
)
Conjugate
(
Haem Inf B
)
Genetic
(
viral vector
,
mRNA
,
DNA
)
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How long do vaccines usually take to develop?
~10 years
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What is a non-pharmaceutical intervention for virus control?
Isolation of the
infected
individuals
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What are key points about viruses?
Obligate intracellular parasites
Infect all living things
Genetic material
surrounded by a
protein coat
Huge burden
of viral disease
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What is a virome?
All
viruses
living with an organism or environment
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What is part of the microbiome?
The
virome
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What is the virosphere?
The sum of all viruses on
Earth
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How much of our cells are human?
Only
~43%
of the cells are human
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How many bacteria are in the human body?
~1.10x10^
14
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How many viruses are in the human body?
~1.10 x 10^
15
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What percentage of our DNA is made of virus genetic material?
5-8%
of our DNA
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What is endogenous retrovirus?
Virus
genetic material
acquired through
infection
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How long have viruses been infecting humans?
Viruses are
older
than humans
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When did herpes viruses first infect human ancestors?
Over
80 million
years ago
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How have viruses played a role in human evolution?
They contributed to the development of the
placenta
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What are the ways viruses can affect us?
Acute infection
, long-term infections,
oncogenesis
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What is an example of an acute infection?
Flu virus
infection
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What is an example of a long-term infection?
HIV
infection
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What is an example of oncogenesis?
HPV
leading to cervical cancer
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Why is it important to identify new viruses?
To understand causes of
human disease
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What is metagenomics?
Sequencing all
genetic
material to find
viruses
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What is zoonosis?
When a
virus
jumps from animal to human
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What percentage of new infectious diseases are zoonoses?
75%
of newly emerging infectious diseases
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What is an example of zoonosis?
SIV
to
HIV
transmission
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See all 101 cards
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