Name ________________________
HIV - Web Lesson
VIRAL INFECTIONS
Go to http://www.hhmi.org/biointeractive/animations/ ' Scroll through index to find Viral Animation
Viral Infection Mechanism
Part 1: The virus
The animation begins inside a ___________________ containing a sample of a ___________________.
Here we see a schematic of the virus with its receptors, envelope, protein shell,
and _______________________. As the camera zooms out, we will see a drop of
the solution being deposited on a petri dish containing cultured of __________________________.
Part 2: The cell monolayer
As the camera zooms into the petri dish, we can see that it is covered with
a thin layer of cultured cells ____________________ to infection by the virus.
The cell membrane, cytoplasm, and ______________________ of a single cell are
labeled.
Part 3: The cell receptors
Increased magnification reveals ___________________________ on the surface of
the cell. These are receptors that are used by cells to communicate with each
other, as well as for other cellular functions. The virus ______________________________
of these proteins to bind to the membrane of the cell. In the next part of the
animation, we will see how receptors on the surface of the viral envelope bind
to the cell's own receptors to allow _____________________________________ to
occur.
Part 4: Fusion with the cell's plasma membrane
The fusion of the cell membrane with the viral envelope allows the viral protein
shell and ___________________________ to be released into the ________________________________
of the cell. The viral receptor proteins remain on the surface of the infected
cell's __________________________________ and will later be incorporated into
the envelopes of newly formed viruses. The contents of the virus are delivered
into the cell's ___________________________, where the viral protein shell is
disassembled. This step frees the viral genome. It enters the cell _______________________,
where it is ___________________________. Only a few proteins remain associated
with the viral genome to permit its passage through the nuclear membrane.
Part 5: Replication of the viral genome
Once inside the host cell, different types of viruses have different mechanisms
for ______________________ their genomes. DNA viruses generally replicate their
DNA in the nucleus of the host cell, while RNA viruses generally replicate their
RNA in the _____________________________. Here, the example shows a DNA virus
whose genome enters the host cell's nucleus and replicates by taking advantage
of the host cell's DNA replication machinery. Newly ______________________________
viral DNA becomes the genome of progeny viruses, but it is also used to make
mRNAs that code for viral _____________________. The mRNAs enter the cytoplasm
and use the host cell's protein synthesis ________________________________ to
make viral proteins. The replicated viral genome leaves the host cell's nucleus
and reenters the cytoplasm, where it is ____________________________ into the
protein shell made from newly synthesized viral proteins.
Part 6: Viral budding
The newly formed viruses now return to the host cell's plasma ________________________________,
which contains thousands of copies of newly synthesized viral receptor proteins.
Viral ____________________________is the process by which the virus acquires
a new envelope from the plasma membrane of the host cell. Now the host cell
is covered with thousands of copies of the original virus ready to be released
and ____________________________more cells.
The last part of the animation shows the progeny viruses _______________________________
other cells in the petri dish. As each cell dies, it turns black. Over the course
of several ____________________________, dying cells spread out in a circle
across the surface of the dish.
Viral Infection Background
Unlike bacteria, viruses are ______________________________ (not cellular).
A virus particle contains only one type of nucleic acid, either ___________________________________,
which is sometimes surrounded by a protein coat. Sometimes the coat is further
encased in a membrane called an ________________________________. Viruses can
only reproduce by using the cellular machinery of ________________________________________________.
Viral reproduction involves the replication of a virus's genetic material, either
RNA or DNA, and the synthesis of proteins that either make up the virus (structural
proteins) or that are needed to perform certain functions (such as replication).
In the process of ___________________________________, the genetic information
encoded in the viral DNA is copied or transcribed into a complementary base
sequence of RNA. The virus then uses the cellular machinery to __________________________________
specific proteins from the RNA through the process of translation.
For an RNA virus, the genetic material is already in a form that can be translated
into _____________________________.
COMMUNICABLE DISEASES
Access the database at http://www.health.state.ny.us/ ' Diseases and Conditions
PATHOGEN (What causes it, virus, bacteria..etc)
HOW IS IT TRANSMITTED?
SYMPTOMS?
ANTHRAX
BOTULISM
CHLAMYDIA
HEPATITIS A
HEPATITIS B
LEPROSY
RINGWORM
POLIOMYELITIS (polio)
SCABIES
TUBERCULOSIS
WEST NILE VIRUS
YELLOW FEVER