Everything about Viruses totally explained
A
virus (from the
Latin virus meaning "toxin" or "poison"), is a
sub-microscopic infectious agent that's unable to grow or reproduce outside a
host cell. Each viral particle, or
virion, consists of genetic material,
DNA or
RNA, within a protective protein coat called a
capsid. The capsid shape varies from simple helical and icosahedral (polyhedral or near-spherical) forms, to more complex structures with tails or an
envelope. Viruses infect cellular life forms and are grouped into animal, plant and bacterial types, according to the type of host infected.
Biologists debate whether or not viruses are living organisms. Some consider them non-living as they don't meet the criteria of the definition of
life. For example, unlike most organisms, viruses don't have
cells. However, viruses have genes and evolve by
natural selection. Others have described them as organisms at the edge of life. Viral infections in human and animal hosts usually result in an immune response and
disease. Often, a virus is completely eliminated by the
immune system.
Antibiotics have no effect on viruses, but
antiviral drugs have been developed to treat life-threatening infections.
Vaccines that produce lifelong
immunity can prevent viral infections.
Etymology
The word is from the
Latin virus referring to
poison and other noxious substances, first used in English in 1392.
Virulent, from Latin
virulentus, "poisonous", dates to 1400. A meaning of "agent that causes infectious disease" is first recorded in 1728, Today,
virus is used to describe the biological viruses discussed above and as a
metaphor for other parasitically-reproducing things, such as
memes or
computer viruses (since 1972). though the cause of this disease was unknown at the time. In the 10th century,
Muhammad ibn Zakarīya Rāzi (Rhazes) wrote the
Treatise on Smallpox and Measles, in which he gave the first clear descriptions of smallpox and
measles. In the 1020s,
Avicenna wrote
The Canon of Medicine, in which he discovered the contagious nature of
infectious diseases, such as
tuberculosis and
sexually transmitted diseases, and their distribution through bodily contact or through
water and
soil; stated that bodily
secretion is contaminated by "foul foreign earthly bodies" before being infected;
When the
Black Death (
bubonic plague) reached
al-Andalus in the 14th century,
Ibn Khatima discovered that infectious diseases are caused by
microorganisms which enter the human body. The etiologic cause of the bubonic plague would later be identified as a bacterium. Another 14th century Andalusian physician,
Ibn al-Khatib (1313-1374), wrote a treatise called
On the Plague, in which he stated how infectious diseases can be transmitted through bodily contact and "through garments, vessels and earrings." In 1717,
Mary Montagu, the wife of an English ambassador to the
Ottoman Empire, observed local women
inoculating their children against
smallpox. In the late 18th century,
Edward Jenner observed and studied Miss Sarah Nelmes, a milkmaid who had previously caught
cowpox and was found to be immune to
smallpox, a similar, but devastating virus. Jenner developed the smallpox
vaccine based on these findings. After lengthy
vaccination campaigns, the
World Health Organization (WHO) certified the eradication of
smallpox in 1979.
In the late 19th century,
Charles Chamberland developed a porcelain filter with pores small enough to remove cultured bacteria from their culture medium.
Dimitri Ivanovski used this filter to study an infection of tobacco plants, now known as
tobacco mosaic virus. He passed crushed leaf extracts of infected tobacco plants through the filter, then used the filtered extracts to infect other plants, thereby proving that the infectious agent wasn't a bacterium. Similar experiments were performed by several other researchers, with similar results. These experiments showed that viruses are
orders of magnitude smaller than bacteria. The term
virus was coined by the Dutch microbiologist
Martinus Beijerinck, who showed, using methods based on the work of Ivanovski, that tobacco mosaic disease is caused by something smaller than a bacterium. He coined the Latin phrase "contagium vivum fluidum" (which means "soluble living germ") as the first idea of the virus. The first human virus identified was
Yellow Fever virus.
In the early 20th century,
Frederick Twort discovered that bacteria could be infected by viruses.
Felix d'Herelle, working independently, showed that a preparation of viruses caused areas of cellular death on thin
cell cultures spread on
agar. Counting the dead areas allowed him to estimate the original number of viruses in the suspension. The invention of
electron microscopy provided the first look at viruses. In 1935,
Wendell Stanley crystallized the tobacco mosaic virus and found it to be mostly
protein. A short time later, the virus was separated into protein and
nucleic acid parts. In 1939,
Max Delbrück and E.L. Ellis demonstrated that, in contrast to cellular organisms, bacteriophage reproduce in "one step", rather than exponentially.
A major problem for early virologists was the inability to propagate viruses on sterile culture media, as is done with cellular microorganisms. This limitation required medical virologists to infect living animals with infectious material, which is dangerous. The first breakthrough came in 1931, when
Ernest William Goodpasture demonstrated the growth of
influenza and several other viruses in fertile chicken eggs. However, some viruses wouldn't grow in chicken eggs, and a more flexible technique was needed for propagation of viruses. The solution came in 1949 when
John Franklin Enders,
Thomas H. Weller and
Frederick Chapman Robbins together developed a technique to grow the
polio virus in cultures of living animal cells. Their methods have since been extended and applied to the growth of viruses and other infectious agents that don't grow on sterile culture media.
Origins
The origin of modern viruses isn't entirely clear. It may be that no single mechanism can account for their origin. They don't
fossilize well, so
molecular techniques have been the most useful means of hypothesising how they arose. Research in
microfossil identification and molecular biology may yet discern fossil evidence dating to the
Archean or
Proterozoic eons. Two main hypotheses currently exist.
Small viruses with only a few genes may be runaway stretches of nucleic acid originating from the genome of a living organism. Their genetic material could have been derived from transferable genetic elements such as
plasmids or
transposons, that move within, leave, and enter genomes. New viruses are emerging
de novo and therefore, it isn't always the case that viruses have ancestors.
Viruses with larger genomes, such as
poxviruses, may have once been small cells that parasitized larger host cells. Over time, genes not required by their parasitic lifestyle would have been lost in a streamlining process known as
retrograde-evolution or
reverse-evolution. The bacteria
Rickettsia and
Chlamydia are living cells that, like viruses, can only reproduce inside host cells. They lend credence to the streamlining hypothesis, as their parasitic lifestyle is likely to have led to the loss of genes that enabled them to survive outside a host cell.
It is possible that viruses represent a primitive form of self replicating DNA and are a precursor to life as it's currently defined. Other infectious particles which are even simpler in structure than viruses include
viroids,
satellites, and
prions.
Classification
In
taxonomy, the classification of viruses is difficult owing to the lack of a fossil record and the dispute over whether they're living or non-living. They don't fit easily into any of the
domains of
biological classification, and classification begins at the
family rank. However, the domain name of
Acytota (without cells) has been suggested. This would place viruses on a par with the other domains of
Eubacteria,
Archaea, and
Eukarya. Not all families are currently classified into orders, nor all genera classified into families.
In 1962,
André Lwoff,
Robert Horne, and
Paul Tournier were the first to develop a means of virus classification, based on the
Linnaean hierarchical system. This system based classification on
phylum,
class,
order,
family,
genus, and
species. Viruses were grouped according to their shared properties (not of their hosts) and the type of nucleic acid forming their genomes. Following this initial system, a few modifications were made and the
International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses was developed (ICTV).
ICTV classification
The
International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses (ICTV) developed the current classification system and put in place guidelines that put a greater weighting on certain virus properties to maintain family uniformity. A universal system for classifying viruses, and a unified taxonomy, has been established since 1966. In determining order, taxonomists should consider the type of nucleic acid present, whether the nucleic acid is single- or double-stranded, and the presence or absence of an
envelope. After these three main properties, other characteristics can be considered: the type of host, the capsid shape, immunological properties and the type of disease it causes. The system makes use of a series of ranked
taxons.
The general structure is as follows:
» Order (
-virales)
:
Family (
-viridae)
» ::
Subfamily (
-virinae)
:::
Genus (
-virus)
» ::::
Species (
-virus)
The recognition of orders is very recent; to date, only three have been named, and most families remain unplaced. The committee doesn't formally distinguish between subspecies, strains, and isolates. In total there are three orders, 56 families, nine subfamilies, and 233 genera. ICTV recognizes about 1,550 virus species, but about 30,000 virus strains and isolates are being tracked by virologists.
The
Nobel Prize-winning biologist
David Baltimore devised the
Baltimore classification system. The ICTV classification system is used in conjunction with the Baltimore classification system in modern virus classification.
Baltimore Classification
The Baltimore classification of viruses is based on the mechanism of
mRNA production. Viruses must generate positive strand mRNAs from their genomes to produce proteins and replicate themselves, but different mechanisms are used to achieve this in each virus family. This classification places viruses into seven groups:
chicken pox virus,
Varicella zoster (VZV), belongs to family
Herpesviridae, subfamily
Alphaherpesvirinae and genus
Varicellovirus. It remains unranked in terms of order. VZV is in Group I of the Baltimore Classification because it's a dsDNA virus that doesn't use
reverse transcriptase.
Structure
A complete virus particle, known as a virion, consists of
nucleic acid surrounded by a protective coat of
protein called a
capsid. Viruses can have a
lipid "envelope" derived from the host
cell membrane. A capsid is made from proteins encoded by the viral
genome and its shape serves as the basis for
morphological and antigenic distinction. Virally coded protein subunits will self-assemble to form a capsid, generally requiring the presence of the virus genome. However, complex viruses code for proteins which assist in the construction of their capsid. Proteins associated with nucleic acid are known as
nucleoproteins, and the association of viral capsid proteins with viral nucleic acid is called a nucleocapsid.
In general, there are four main morphological virus types:
| Helical viruses |
|
Helical capsids are composed of a single type of subunit stacked around a central axis to form a helical structure which may have a central cavity, or hollow tube. This arrangement results in rod-shaped or filamentous virions: these can be anything from short and highly rigid, to long and very flexible. The genetic material, generally single-stranded RNA, but ssDNA in some cases, is bound into the protein helix, by interactions between the negatively-charged nucleic acid and positive charges on the protein. Overall, the length of a helical capsid is related to the length of the nucleic acid contained within it and the diameter is dependent on the size and arrangement of protomers. The well-studied Tobacco mosaic virus is an example of a helical virus. |
| Icosahedron viruses |
|
Icosahedral capsid symmetry results in a spherical appearance of viruses at low magnification but actually consists of capsomers arranged in a regular geometrical pattern, similar to a soccer ball, hence they're not truly "spherical". Capsomers are ring shaped constructed from five to six copies of protomers. These associate via non-covalent bonding to enclose the viral nucleic acid, though generally less intimately than helical capsids, and may involve one or more protomers.Icosahedral architecture was employed by R. Buckminster Fuller in his geodesic dome, and is the most efficient way of creating an enclosed robust structure from multiple copies of a single protein.
The number of proteins required to form a spherical virus capsid is denoted by the T-number, where 60×t proteins are necessary. In the case of the hepatitis B virus the T-number is 4, and 240 proteins assemble to form the capsid.
|
| Enveloped viruses |
|
Viruses are able to envelope themselves in a modified form of one of the cell membranes either the outer membrane surrounding an infected host cell, or from internal membranes such as nuclear membrane or endoplasmic reticulum, thus gaining an outer lipid bilayer known as a viral envelope. This membrane is studded with proteins coded for by the viral genome and host genome; however the lipid membrane itself and any carbohydrates present are entirely host-coded. The Influenza virus and HIV use this strategy.
The viral envelope can give a virion a few distinct advantages over other capsid-only virions, such as protection from enzymes and certain chemicals. The proteins in it can include glycoproteins functioning as receptor molecules, allowing host cells to recognize and bind these virions, resulting in the possible uptake of the virion into the cell. Most enveloped viruses are dependent on the envelope for infectivity.
|
| Complex viruses |
|
These viruses possess a capsid which is neither purely helical, nor purely icosahedral, and which may possess extra structures such as protein tails or a complex outer wall. Some bacteriophages have a complex structure consisting of an icosahedral head bound to a helical tail, the latter of which may have a hexagonal base plate with protruding protein tail fibres. |
|
The Poxviruses are large, complex viruses which have an unusual morphology. The viral genome is associated with proteins within a central disk structure known as a nucleoid. The nucleoid is surrounded by a membrane and two lateral bodies of unknown function. The virus has an outer envelope with a thick layer of protein studded over its surface. The whole particle is slightly pleiomorphic, ranging from ovoid to brick shape. |
Electron microscopy
Electron microscopy is the most common method used to study the
morphology of viruses. To increase the contrast between viruses and the background, electron-dense "stains" are used. These are solutions of salts of heavy metals such as
tungsten, that scatter the electrons from regions covered with the stain. When virus particles are coated with stain (positive staining), fine detail is obscured.
Negative staining overcomes this problem by staining the background only.
Size
A medium-sized virion next to a flea is roughly equivalent to a human next to a mountain twice the size of
Mount Everest. Some
filoviruses have a total length of up to 1400 nm, however their capsid diameters are only about 80 nm. Most viruses which have been studied have a
capsid diameter between 10 and 300
nanometres. Most viruses are unable to be seen with a
light microscope but some are as large or larger than the smallest bacteria and can be seen under high optical magnification. More commonly, both scanning and transmission
electron microscopes are used to visualize virus particles.
Genome
| Property |
Parameters |
| Nucleic acid |
|
| Shape |
Linear
Circular
Segmented
|
| Strandedness |
Single-stranded
Double-stranded
Double-stranded with regions of single-strandedness
|
| Sense |
Positive sense (+)
Negative sense (-)
Ambisense (+/-)
|
An enormous variety of genomic structures can be seen among viral species; as a group they contain more structural genomic diversity than the entire kingdoms of either plants, animals, or bacteria.
Nucleic acid
A virus may employ either
DNA or
RNA as the nucleic acid. Rarely do they contain both, however
cytomegalovirus is an exception to this, possessing a DNA core with several
mRNA segments. By far most viruses have RNA. Plant viruses tend to have single-stranded RNA and bacteriophages tend to have double-stranded DNA. Some virus species possess abnormal
nucleotides, such as hydroxymethylcytosine instead of
cytosine, as a normal part of their genome.
Shape
Viral genomes may be circular, such as
polyomaviruses, or linear, such as
adenoviruses. The type of nucleic acid is irrelevant to the shape of the genome. Among
RNA viruses, the genome is often divided up into separate parts within the virion and are called
segmented. Double-stranded RNA genomes and some single-stranded RNA genomes are segmented. Each segment often codes for one protein and they're usually found together in one capsid. Every segment isn't required to be in the same virion for the overall virus to be infectious, as demonstrated by the
brome mosaic virus.
Strandedness
A viral genome, irrespective of nucleic acid type, may be either single-stranded or double-stranded. Single-stranded genomes consist of an unpaired nucleic acid, analogous to one-half of a ladder split down the middle. Double-stranded genomes consist of 2 complementary paired nucleic acids, analogous to a ladder. Viruses, such as those belonging to the
Hepadnaviridae, contain a genome which is partially double-stranded and partially single-stranded. Viruses that infect humans include double-stranded RNA (for example
Rotavirus), single-stranded RNA (for example
Influenza virus), single-stranded DNA (for example
Parvovirus B19) and double-stranded DNA (
Herpes virus).
Sense
For viruses with RNA as their nucleic acid, the strands are said to be either
positive-sense (called the plus-strand) or
negative-sense (called the minus-strand), depending on whether it's complementary to viral mRNA. Positive-sense viral RNA is identical to viral mRNA and thus can be immediately
translated by the host cell. Negative-sense viral RNA is complementary to mRNA and thus must be converted to positive-sense RNA by an
RNA polymerase before translation. DNA nomenclature is similar to RNA nomenclature, in that the
coding strand for the viral mRNA is complementary to it (-), and the
non-coding strand is a copy of it (+).
Genome size
Genome size in terms of the weight of
nucleotides varies between species. The smallest genomes code for only four proteins and weigh about 10
6 Daltons, the largest weigh about 10
8 Daltons and code for over one hundred proteins.
RNA viruses generally have smaller genome sizes than
DNA viruses due to a higher error-rate when replicating, resulting in a maximum upper size limit. Beyond this limit, errors in the genome when replicating render the virus useless or uncompetitive. To compensate for this, RNA viruses often have segmented genomes where the genome is split into smaller molecules, thus reducing the chance of error. In contrast, DNA viruses generally have larger genomes due to the high fidelity of their replication enzymes.
Gene reassortment
There is an evolutionary advantage in having a segmented genome. Different strains of a virus with a segmented genome, from a pig or a bird or a human for example, such as
Influenza virus, can shuffle and combine with other genes producing progeny viruses or (offspring) that have unique characteristics. This is called reassortment or
viral sex. This is one reason why Influenza virus constantly changes.
Genetic recombination
Genetic recombination is the process by which a strand of DNA is broken and then joined to the end of a different DNA molecule. This can occur when viruses infect cells simultaneously and studies of viral evolution have shown that recombination has been rampant in the species studied. Recombination is common to both RNA and DNA viruses.
Genetic change
Viruses undergo genetic change by several mechanisms. These include a process called
genetic drift where individual bases in the DNA or RNA
mutate to other bases. Most of these
point mutations are silent in that they don't change the protein that the gene encodes, but others can confer evolutionary advantages such as resistance to
antiviral drugs.
Antigenic shift is where there's a major change in the
genome of the virus. This occurs as a result of
recombination or
reassortment (see above). When this happens with
influenza viruses,
pandemics may result. By genome rearrangement the structure of the gene changes although no mutations have necessarily occurred.
RNA viruses are much more likely to mutate than DNA viruses for the reasons outlined above. Viruses often exist as
quasispecies or swarms of viruses of the same species but with slightly different genome nucleoside sequences. Such quasispecies are a prime target for
natural selection.
Replication
Viral populations don't grow through
cell division, because they're acellular; instead, they use the machinery and metabolism of a host cell to produce multiple copies of themselves. A virus can still cause degenerative effects within a cell without causing its death; collectively these are termed
cytopathic effects.
Virus life cycle
The
life cycle of viruses differs greatly between species (see below) but there are six
basic stages in the life cycle of viruses:
Attachment is a specific binding between viral capsid proteins and specific receptors on the host cellular surface. This specificity determines the host range of a virus. For example, the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infects only human T cells, because its surface protein, gp120, can interact with CD4 and receptors on the T cell's surface. This mechanism has evolved to favour those viruses that only infect cells that they're capable of replicating in. Attachment to the receptor can induce the viral-envelope protein to undergo changes that results in the fusion of viral and cellular membranes.
Penetration: following attachment, viruses enter the host cell through receptor mediated endocytosis or membrane fusion.
Uncoating is a process in which the viral capsid is degraded by viral enzymes or host enzymes thus releasing the viral genomic nucleic acid.
Replication involves synthesis of viral messenger RNA (mRNA) for viruses except positive sense RNA viruses (see above), viral protein synthesis and assembly of viral proteins and viral genome replication.
Following the assembly of the virus particles post-translational modification of the viral proteins often occurs. In viruses such as HIV, this modification, (sometimes called maturation), occurs after the virus has been released from the host cell.
Viruses are released from the host cell by lysis (see below). Enveloped viruses (for example, HIV) typically are released from the host cell by budding. During this process, the virus acquires its phospholipid envelope which contains embedded viral glycoproteins.
DNA viruses
Animal DNA viruses, such as herpesviruses, enter the host via endocytosis, the process by which cells take in material from the external environment. Frequently after a chance collision with an appropriate surface receptor on a cell, the virus penetrates the cell, the viral genome is released from the capsid, and host polymerases begin transcribing viral mRNA. New virions are assembled and released either by cell lysis or by budding off the cell membrane.
RNA viruses
Animal RNA viruses can be placed into about four different groups depending on their modes of replication. The polarity of the RNA largely determines the replicative mechanism, as well as whether the genetic material is single-stranded or double-stranded. Some RNA viruses are actually DNA-based but use an RNA-intermediate to replicate. RNA viruses are dependent on virally encoded RNA replicase to create copies of their genomes.
Reverse transcribing viruses
Reverse transcribing viruses replicate using reverse transcription, which is the formation of DNA from an RNA template. Reverse transcribing viruses containing RNA genomes use a DNA intermediate to replicate, whereas those containing DNA genomes use an RNA intermediate during genome replication. Both types use the reverse transcriptase enzyme to carry out the nucleic acid conversion. Both types are susceptible to antiviral drugs that inhibit the reverse transcriptase enzyme, for example zidovudine and lamivudine.
An example of the first type is HIV which is a retrovirus. Retroviruses often integrate the DNA produced by reverse transcription into the host genome. This is why HIV infection can at present, only be treated and not cured.
Examples of the second type are the Hepadnaviridae, which includes the Hepatitis B virus and the Caulimoviridae - for example Cauliflower mosaic virus.
Bacteriophages
Bacteriophages infect specific bacteria by binding to surface receptor molecules and then enter the cell. Within a short amount of time, in some cases, just minutes, bacterial polymerase starts translating viral mRNA into protein. These proteins go on to become either new virions within the cell, helper proteins which help assembly of new virions, or proteins involved in cell lysis. Viral enzymes aid in the breakdown of the cell membrane, and in the case of the T4 phage, in just over twenty minutes after injection over three hundred phages could be released.
Lifeform debate
Viruses have been described as "organisms at the edge of life", but argument continues over whether viruses are truly alive. According to the United States Code, they're considered microorganisms in the sense of biological weaponry and malicious use. Scientists, however, are divided. Things become more complicated as they look at viroids and prions. Viruses resemble other organisms in that they possess genes and can evolve in infected cells by natural selection.
They can reproduce by creating multiple copies of themselves through self-assembly.
Viruses don't have a cell structure (regarded as the basic unit of life), although they do have genes. Additionally, although they reproduce, they don't self-metabolize and require a host cell to replicate and synthesize new products. However, bacterial species such as Rickettsia and Chlamydia are considered living organisms but are unable to reproduce outside a host cell.
An argument can be made that accepted forms of life use cell division to reproduce, whereas viruses spontaneously assemble within cells. The comparison is drawn between viral self-assembly and the autonomous growth of non-living crystals. Virus self-assembly within host cells has implications for the study of the origin of life, as it lends credence to the hypothesis that life could have started as self-assembling organic molecules.
If viruses are considered alive, then the criteria specifying life will have to exclude the cell. If viruses are said to be alive, the question could follow of whether even smaller infectious particles, such as viroids and prions, are alive.
Viruses and disease
» For more examples of diseases caused by viruses see List of infectious diseases.
Examples of common human diseases caused by viruses include the common cold, the flu, chickenpox and cold sores. Serious diseases such as Ebola, AIDS, avian influenza and SARS are caused by viruses. The relative ability of viruses to cause disease is described in terms of virulence. Other diseases are under investigation as to whether they too have a virus as the causative agent, such as the possible connection between Human Herpesvirus Six (HHV6) and neurological diseases such as multiple sclerosis and chronic fatigue syndrome. There is current controversy over whether the borna virus, previously thought of as causing neurological diseases in horses, could be responsible for psychiatric illnesses in humans.
Viruses have different mechanisms by which they produce disease in an organism, which largely depends on the species. Mechanisms at the cellular level primarily include cell lysis, the breaking open and subsequent death of the cell. In multicellular organisms, if enough cells die the whole organism will start to suffer the effects. Although viruses cause disruption of healthy homeostasis, resulting in disease, they may exist relatively harmlessly within an organism. An example would include the ability of the herpes simplex virus, which cause cold sores, to remain in a dormant state within the human body. This is called latency and is a characteristic of the herpes viruses including the Epstein-Barr virus, which causes glandular fever, and the Varicella zoster virus, which causes chicken pox. Latent chickenpox infections return in later life as the disease called shingles.
Some viruses can cause life-long or chronic infections, where the viruses continue to replicate in the body despite the hosts' defense mechanisms. This is common in Hepatitis B virus and Hepatitis C Virus infections. People chronically infected with the Hepatitis B virus are known as carriers who serve as reservoirs of infectious virus. In some populations, with a high proportion of carriers, the disease is said to be endemic. When diagnosing Hepatitis B virus infections, it's important to distinguish between acute and chronic infections.
Epidemiology
Viral epidemiology is the branch of medical science dealing with the transmission and control of virus infections in humans. Transmission of viruses can be vertical, that's from mother to child, or horizontal, which means from person to person. Examples of vertical transmission include Hepatitis B virus and HIV where the baby is born already infected with the virus. Another, more rare, example is the Varicella zoster virus, which although causing relatively mild infections in humans, can be fatal to the foetus and newly born baby.
Horizontal transmission is the most common mechanism of spread of viruses in populations. Transmission can be exchange of blood by sexual activity, for example HIV, Hepatitis B and Hepatitis C; by mouth by exchange of saliva, for example Epstein-Barr virus, or from contaminated food or water, for example Norovirus; by breathing in viruses in the form of aerosols, for example Influenza virus; and by insect vectors such as mosquitoes, for example dengue.
The rate or speed of transmission of viral infections depends on factors that include population density, the number of susceptible individuals, (for example those who are not immune), the quality of health care and the weather.
Epidemics and pandemics
Native American populations were devastated by contagious diseases, particularly smallpox, brought to the Americas by European colonists. It is unclear how many Native Americans were killed by foreign diseases after the arrival of Columbus in the Americas, but the numbers have been estimated to be close to 70% of the indigenous population. The damage done by this disease significantly aided European attempts to displace and conquer the native population.
A pandemic is a world-wide epidemic. The 1918 flu pandemic, commonly referred to as the Spanish flu, was a category 5 influenza pandemic caused by an unusually severe and deadly Influenza A virus. The victims were often healthy young adults, in contrast to most influenza outbreaks which predominantly affect juvenile, elderly, or otherwise weakened patients.
The Spanish flu pandemic lasted from 1918 to 1919. Older estimates say it killed 40–50 million people, while more recent research suggests that it may have killed as many as 100 million people, or 5% of the world's population in 1918.
Most researchers believe that HIV originated in sub-Saharan Africa during the twentieth century; it's now a pandemic, with an estimated 38.6 million people now living with the disease worldwide. As of January 2006, the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) and the World Health Organization (WHO) estimate that AIDS has killed more than 25 million people since it was first recognized on June 5, 1981, making it one of the most destructive epidemics in recorded history.
Several highly lethal viral pathogens are members of the Filoviridae. Filoviruses are filament-like viruses that cause viral hemorrhagic fever, and include the Ebola and Marburg viruses. The Marburg virus attracted widespread press attention in April 2005 for an outbreak in Angola. Beginning in October 2004 and continuing into 2005, the outbreak was the world's worst epidemic of any kind of viral hemorrhagic fever.
Viruses and cancer
Viruses are an established cause of malignancy in humans and other species.
The main viruses associated with human cancers are human papillomavirus, hepatitis B and hepatitis C virus, Epstein-Barr virus, and human T-lymphotropic virus.
Hepatitis viruses, including hepatitis B and hepatitis C, can induce a chronic viral infection that leads to liver cancer. Infection by human T-lymphotropic virus can lead to tropical spastic paraparesis and adult T-cell leukemia. Human papillomaviruses are an established cause of cancers of cervix, skin, anus, and penis. Within the Herpesviridae, Kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus causes Kaposi's sarcoma and body cavity lymphoma, and Epstein–Barr virus causes Burkitt's lymphoma, Hodgkin’s lymphoma, B lymphoproliferative disorder and nasopharyngeal carcinoma.
Laboratory diagnosis
Growth of the virus in a cell culture from a specimen taken from the patient.
Detection of virus-specific IgM antibody (see below) in the blood.
Detection of virus antigens by ELISA in tissues and fluids.
Detection of virus encoded DNA and RNA by PCR.
Observation of virus particles by electron microscopy.
Prevention and treatment
Because viruses use the machinery of a host cell to reproduce and reside within them, they're difficult to eliminate without killing the host cell. The most effective medical approaches to viral diseases so far are vaccinations to provide resistance to infection, and antiviral drugs which treat the symptoms of viral infections.
Host immune response
The body's first line of defense against viruses is the innate immune system. This comprises cells and other mechanisms that defend the host from infection in a non-specific manner. This means that the cells of the innate system recognize, and respond to, pathogens in a generic way, but unlike the adaptive immune system, it doesn't confer long-lasting or protective immunity to the host.
RNA interference is an important innate defense against viruses. Many viruses have a replication strategy that involves double-stranded RNA dsRNA. When such a virus infects a cell, it releases its RNA molecule or molecules, which immediately bind to a protein complex called Dicer that cuts the RNA into smaller pieces. A biochemical pathway called the RISC complex is activated which degrades the viral mRNA and the cell survives the infection. Rotaviruses avoid this mechanism by not uncoating fully inside the cell and by releasing newly produced mRNA through pores in the particle's inner capsid. The genomic dsRNA remains protected inside the core of the virion.
When the adaptive immune system of a vertebrate encounters a virus, it produces specific antibodies which bind to the virus and render it non-infectious. This is called humoral immunity. Two types of antibodies are important. The first called IgM is highly effective at neutralizing viruses but is only produced by the cells of the immune system for a few weeks. The second, called, IgG is produced indefinitely. The presence of IgM in the blood of the host is used to test for acute infection, whereas IgG indicates an infection sometime in the past. Both types of antibodies are measured when tests for immunity are carried out.
A second defense of vertebrates against viruses is called cell-mediated immunity and involves immune cells known as T cells. The body's cells constantly display short fragments of their proteins on the cell's surface, and if a T cell recognizes a suspicious viral fragment there, the host cell is destroyed by T killer cells and the virus-specific T-cells proliferate. Cells such as the macrophage are specialists at this antigen presentation.
Not all virus infections produce a protective immune response in this way. HIV evades the immune system by constantly changing the amino acid sequence of the proteins on the surface of the virion. These persistent viruses evade immune control by sequestration, blockade of antigen presentation, cytokine resistance, evasion of natural killer cell activities, escape from apoptosis, and antigenic shift. Other viruses, called "neurotropic viruses", are disseminated by neural spread where the immune system may be unable to reach them.
The production of interferon is an important host defense mechanism.
Vaccines
Vaccination is a cheap and effective way of preventing infections by viruses. Vaccines were used to prevent viral infections long before the discovery of the actual viruses. Their use has resulted in a dramatic decline in morbidity (illness) and mortality (death) associated with viral infections such as polio, measles, mumps and rubella. Smallpox infections have been eradicated. Currently vaccines are available to prevent over thirteen viral infections of humans, and more are used to prevent viral infections of animals. Vaccines can consist of live-attenuated or killed viruses, or viral proteins (antigens). Live vaccines contain weakened forms of the virus that causes the disease. Such viruses are called attenuated. Live vaccines can be dangerous when given to people with a weak immunity, (who are described as immunocompromised), because in these people, the weakened virus can cause the original disease. Biotechnology and genetic engineering techniques are used to produce subunit vaccines. These vaccines use only the capsid proteins of the virus. Hepatitis B vaccine is an example of this type of vaccine. Subunit vaccines are safe for immunocompromised patients because they can't cause the disease.
The Yellow Fever virus vaccine, a live-attenuated strain called 17D, is arguably the safest and most effective vaccine ever generated.
Antiviral drugs
antiviral drugs has increased rapidly. This has been driven by the AIDS epidemic. Antiviral drugs are often nucleoside analogues, (fake DNA building blocks), which viruses incorporate into their genomes during replication. The life-cycle of the virus is then halted because the newly synthesized DNA is inactive. This is because these analogues lack the hydroxyl groups which along with phosphorus atoms, link together to form the strong "backbone" of the DNA molecule. This is called DNA chain termination. Examples of nucleoside analogues are aciclovir for Herpes virus infections and lamivudine for HIV and Hepatitis B virus infections. Aciclovir is one of the oldest and most frequently prescribed antiviral drugs.
Other antiviral drugs in use target different stages of the viral life cycle. HIV is dependent on a proteolytic enzyme called the HIV-1 protease for it to become fully infectious. There is a class of drugs called protease inhibitors which have been designed to inactivate the enzyme.
Hepatitis C is caused by an RNA virus. In 80% of people infected, the disease is chronic, and without treatment, they're infected and infectious for the remainder of their lives. However, there's now an effective treatment using the nucleoside analogue drug ribavirin combined with interferon. The treatment of chronic carriers of the Hepatitis B virus by using a similar strategy using lamivudine is being developed.
Notable examples
The clinically most notable virus species belong to the following families:
Applications
Life sciences and medicine
Viruses are important to the study of molecular and cellular biology as they provide simple systems that can be used to manipulate and investigate the functions of cells. The study and use of viruses have provided valuable information about aspects of cell biology. For example, viruses have been useful in the study of genetics and helped our understanding of the basic mechanisms of molecular genetics, such as DNA replication, transcription, RNA processing, translation, protein transport, and immunology.
Geneticists often use viruses as vectors to introduce genes into cells that they're studying. This is useful for making the cell produce a foreign substance, or to study the effect of introducing a new gene into the genome. In similar fashion, virotherapy uses viruses as vectors to treat various diseases, as they can specifically target cells and DNA. It shows promising use in the treatment of cancer and in gene therapy. Eastern European scientists have used phage therapy as an alternative to antibiotics for some time, and interest in this approach is increasing, due to the high level of antibiotic resistance now found in some pathogenic bacteria.
Granulosis (GV) and nucleo-polyhedrosis viruses (NPV) may also be used as biological insecticides (e.g. Cydia pomonella granulovirus).
Materials science and nanotechnology
Current trends in nanotechnology promise to make much more versatile use of viruses. From the viewpoint of a materials scientist, viruses can be regarded as organic nanoparticles.
Their surface carries specific tools designed to cross the barriers of their host cells. The size and shape of viruses, and the number and nature of the functional groups on their surface, is precisely defined. As such, viruses are commonly used in materials science as scaffolds for covalently linked surface modifications. A particular quality of viruses is that they can be tailored by directed evolution. The powerful techniques developed by life sciences are becoming the basis of engineering approaches towards nanomaterials, opening a wide range of applications far beyond biology and medicine.
Because of their size, shape, and well-defined chemical structures, viruses have been used as templates for organizing materials on the nanoscale. Recent examples include work at the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, DC, using Cowpea Mosaic Virus (CPMV) particles to amplify signals in microarray based sensors. In this application, the virus particles separate the fluorescent dyes used for signaling in order to prevent the formation of non-fluorescent dimers that act as quenchers. Another example is the use of CPMV as a nanoscale breadboard for molecular electronics. In April 2006, scientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) created nanoscale metallic wires using a genetically-modified virus. The MIT team was able to use the virus to create a working battery with an energy density up to three times more than current materials. The potential exists for this technology to be used in liquid crystals, solar cells, fuel cells, and other electronics in the future.
Weapons
The ability of viruses to cause devastating epidemics in human societies has led to the concern that viruses could be weaponized for biological warfare. Further concern was raised by the successful recreation of the infamous 1918 influenza virus in a laboratory. The smallpox virus devastated numerous societies throughout history before its eradication. It currently exists in several secure laboratories in the world, and fears that it may be used as a weapon are not totally unfounded. The vaccine for smallpox isn't safe, and during the years before the eradication of smallpox disease more people became seriously ill as a result of vaccination than did people from smallpox and smallpox vaccination is no longer universally practiced. Thus, the modern global human population has almost no established resistance to smallpox; if it were to be released, a massive loss of life could be sustained before the virus is brought under control.
Electron micrographs of viruses
Image:Norwalk.jpg|Norovirus. This RNA virus causes winter vomiting disease. It is often in the news as a cause of gastro-enteritis on cruise ships and in hospitals.
Image:Caliciviruses2.jpg|Caliciviruses are related to Noroviruses.
Image:Human Torovirus.jpg|Torovirus. An enveloped RNA virus.
Image:Coronaviruses 004 lores.jpg|Coronaviruses are a group of viruses that have a halo, or crown-like (corona) appearance when viewed under a microscope.
Image:Ebola virus em.png|Ebola Virus is a filamentous RNA virus.
Image:Measles virus.JPG|Measles virus. This is called a thin section where the virus particle has been cut in two.
Image:Respiratory syncytial virus 01.jpg|Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV). In this preparation the ribonucleoprotein can be seen as a herring bone pattern.
Image:Parvovirus in Blood.jpg|Parvovirus B19. Parvovirus B19 is a small DNA virus best known for causing a childhood exanthema called fifth disease or erythema infectiosum.
Image:Papilloma Virus (HPV) EM.jpg|Human Papilloma Virus
Image:EM of influenza virus.jpg|Influenza virus
Image:Herpes simplex virus TEM B82-0474 lores.jpg|Transmission electron micrograph of Herpes virus an enveloped virus that looks like fried eggs by negative stain electron microscopy.
Image:Polio EM PHIL 1875 lores.PNG|TEM micrograph of Poliovirus virions.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Viruses'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://virus.totallyexplained.com">Virus Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |