Cards (101)

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