Micr33 – Microbiology Test Questions – Flashcards
Unlock all answers in this set
Unlock answersquestion
Obligatory intracellular parasites |
answer
Viruses can only reproduce inside cells. Outside, they are metabolically inert virions. Hijacks cell's TXN and TLN mechanisms to express early, middle, and late genes |
question
Contain DNA or RNA (not both!) |
answer
It can be ss or ds, circular or linear, and some genomes are multisegmented |
question
Viruses have no |
answer
Ribosomes or any ATP-generating mechanism |
question
Viruses contain a protein coat called a |
answer
Capsid |
question
Characteristics of viruses |
answer
Some enclosed by envelope, some may have spikes. Most viruses infect only specific types of cells in one host (called tissue tropism) |
question
Host range is determined by |
answer
SPECIFIC host attachment sites and cellular factors. Some viruses carry specialized enzymes within their capsids |
question
Virion structure |
answer
Nucleic acid (DNA or RNA genetic material) |
question
Taxonomy of viruses: family names end in |
answer
-viridae |
question
Taxonomy of viruses: genus names end in |
answer
-virus |
question
Taxonomy of viruses: Viral species |
answer
A group of viruses sharing the same genetic information and ecological niche (host). Common name =species, subspecies= number |
question
Viruses must be grown in |
answer
Living cells. Bacteriophages form plaques on lawn of bacteria |
question
Animal cells |
answer
May be grown in living animals or in embryonated eggs, or in cell cultures. Continuous cell lines |
question
Polyhedral virus |
answer
Most common shape. Icosahedron= 20 triangular sides at 12 points |
question
Capsomeres |
answer
Small subunits that make up capsid |
question
Orthopoxvirus |
answer
Has layers of protein or "several protein coats" |
question
Cytopathic effects |
answer
Pathologic, degenerative changes in cells |
question
Serological tests |
answer
Detect antibodies against viruses in a patient. Use antibodies to ID viruses in neutralization tests, viral hemagglutination, and Western blot |
question
The lytic cycle: Attachment |
answer
Phage attaches by tail fibers to host cell |
question
The lytic cycle: Penetration |
answer
Phage lysozyme opens cell wall |
question
The lytic cycle: Biosynthesis |
answer
Production of phage DNA and proteins |
question
The lytic cycle: Maturation |
answer
Assembly of phage particles |
question
The lytic cycle: Release |
answer
Phage lysozyme breaks cell wall (kills it) |
question
Lytic cycle |
answer
Phage causes lysis and death of host cell |
question
Lysogenic cycle |
answer
Prophage DNA incorporated in host DNA. Phage conversion. Specialized transduction |
question
Multiplication of Animal viruses |
answer
Attachment, penetration, uncoating, biosynthesis, maturation, release |
question
Attachment |
answer
Viruses attach to cell membrane |
question
Penetration |
answer
By endocytosis or fusion |
question
Uncoating |
answer
By viral or host enzymes- removal of coat |
question
Biosynthesis |
answer
Production of Nucleic acid and proteins |
question
Maturation |
answer
Nucleic acid and capsid proteins assemble |
question
Release |
answer
By budding (enveloped viruses) or rupture |
question
Activated oncogenes |
answer
Transform normal cells into cancerous cells |
question
Cancer: Transformed cells |
answer
Have increased growth, loss of contact inhibition, tumor-specific transplant antigens, and T antigens. Genetic material of oncogenic viruses becomes integrated into the host cell's DNA |
question
Viruses and Cancer |
answer
Viruses may contribute to 15% of all human cancers Viruses alter growth properties of human cells by triggering expression of oncogenes or disrupting tumor-suppressing genes |
question
Oncogenic DNA viruses |
answer
Adenoviridae, herpesvirudae, poxviridae, papoviridae, hepadnaviridae |
question
Oncogenic RNA viruses |
answer
Retroviridae, viral RNA is transcribed to DNA which can integrate into host DNA. HTLV-1, HTLV-2 |
question
Latent and persistent viral infections |
answer
-Virus remains in asymptomatic host cell for long periods. Ex) cold sores |
question
Prions |
answer
Proteinaceous infectious particle. Inherited and transmissible by ingestion, transplant, and surgical instruments |
question
Prions |
answer
PrPc: normal cellular prion protein, on cell surface PrPsc: scrapie protein |
question
Plant viruses |
answer
Enter through wounds or via insects |
question
Viroids |
answer
Infectious RNA. Ex) potato spindle tuber disease. |
question
Viroids structure |
answer
Tiny naked molecules of circular RNA. Resemble introns of rRNA genes. 200-400 nucleotides long. Resistant to degradation. Cause disease in plants. |
question
Parvoviridae |
answer
Single-stranded DNA, nonenveloped viruses. 5th disease. Anemia in immunocompromised patients |
question
Adenoviridae |
answer
Double-stranded DNA, nonenveloped viruses. Respiratory infectious in humans, tumors in animals |
question
Papoviridae: Polyomavirus |
answer
(polyomaviridae) cause rumors, some cause cancer |
question
Poxviridae |
answer
Double stranded DNA. Enveloped Orthopoxvirus (vaccinia and smallpox viruses) molluscipoxvirus. Cause small pox, molluscum contagiosum, cowpox |
question
Herpesviridae |
answer
Double-stranded DNA, enveloped viruses. (HHV-1-8). Some herpes viruses can remain latent in host cells. Cause a variety of diseases: Fever blisters, chickenpox, shingles, infectious mononucleosis |
question
Hepadnaviridae |
answer
Double stranded DNA, enveloped Hep B is example Use reverse transcriptase- replicate through RNA intermediate |
question
Picornaviridae |
answer
Single stranded RNA, strand, nonenveloped. Enterovirus:poliovirus and coxsackievirus Rhinovirus: causes common cold Hep A |
question
Caliciviridae |
answer
Single stranded RNA, strand, nonenveloped Hep E Norovirus causes gastroenteritis |
question
Togaviridae |
answer
Single-stranded RNA, strand, enveloped Alphavirus- transmitted by Arthropods, includes EEE and WEE Rubivirus (rubella virus) |
question
Flaviviridae |
answer
Single stranded RNA, strand, enveloped. Arboviruses can replicate in Arthropods. Can cause yellow fever, dengue, st Louis and west Nile encephalitis Hep C |
question
Coronaviridae |
answer
Single stranded RNA, strand, enveloped -Upper respiratory infections -Coronavirus -SARS |
question
Rhabdoviridae |
answer
Single-stranded RNA. - strand -vesiculovirus -Lyssavirus (rabies) -cause numerous animal diseases |
question
Filoviridae |
answer
Single stranded RNA, - strand Filovirus Enveloped helical virus Ebola and Marburg viruses Cause hemorrhagic fevers |
question
Paramyxoviridae |
answer
Single stranded RNA, - strand Paramyxovirus Morbilivirus Parainfluenza Mumps Newcastle disease |
question
Deltaviridae |
answer
Single-stranded RNA, - strand, one RNA strand Hep D Depends on confection with hepadnavirus |
question
Orthomyxoviridae |
answer
Single stranded RNA, - strand, multiple RNA strands Envelope spikes can agglutinate RBCs Influenza A and B and C |
question
Bunyaviridae |
answer
Single stranded RNA, - strand, multiple RNA strands Bunyavirus Hantavirus-causes pulmonary syndrome first identified in 1993 in the American Southwest |
question
Arenaviridae |
answer
Single stranded RNA, - strand, multiple RNA strands Helical capsids contain RNA-containing granules, lymphocytic choriomeningitis, VEE, lassa fever |
question
Retroviridae |
answer
Single stranded RNA, 2 RNA strands, produce DNA Use reverse transcriptase to produce DNA from viral genome. HIV Oncogenic viruses-includes all RNA tumor viruses |
question
Reoviridae |
answer
Double-stranded RNA, nonenveloped Reovirus(respiratory enteric orphan) Rotavirus(mild respiratory infections and gastroenteritis) Colorado tick fever |