Study Guide
📖 Core Concepts
Virus – a sub‑microscopic infectious particle (virion) that can only replicate inside a host cell.
Virion components – genome (DNA or RNA), protein capsid (made of capsomeres), and sometimes a host‑derived lipid envelope with glycoproteins.
Genome diversity – DNA or RNA, single‑ or double‑stranded, linear or circular, segmented or unsegmented; a virus never has both DNA and RNA.
Replication strategy – six‑step viral life cycle: attachment → entry → uncoating → genome replication & gene expression → assembly → release (lysis, budding, or lysogeny).
Baltimore classification – groups viruses into 7 classes based on how they generate mRNA (e.g., Class IV = (+)‑sense ssRNA).
Antigenic drift vs. shift – drift = gradual point mutations; shift = reassortment of segmented genomes producing a novel strain.
Lysogenic vs. lytic – lysogenic: viral genome integrates (provirus/prophage) and replicates with host; lytic: rapid replication → cell rupture.
Immune protection – innate sensing (RIG‑I, cGAS) → interferon → adaptive antibodies (IgM → acute, IgG → memory) + cytotoxic T cells.
Vaccines & antivirals – vaccines prime immunity without disease; antivirals target entry, polymerase (nucleoside analogues), protease, or host factors.
---
📌 Must Remember
Virion size: 20–300 nm (≈ 1/100 the size of a typical bacterium).
RNA virus mutation rates: 10⁻³ – 10⁻⁵ substitutions/nt/replication; DNA viruses: 10⁻⁶ – 10⁻⁸.
Positive‑sense RNA can be directly translated; negative‑sense RNA must be transcribed to (+)RNA first.
Retroviruses: RNA → reverse‑transcribed → integrated DNA (provirus).
Key Baltimore classes:
dsDNA → mRNA (e.g., Adenovirus)
ssDNA (+) → mRNA (Parvovirus)
dsRNA → mRNA (Reovirus)
(+) ssRNA → mRNA (Coronavirus)
(–) ssRNA → mRNA (Influenza)
ssRNA‑RT → DNA → mRNA (Retrovirus)
dsDNA‑RT → RNA → DNA (Hepadnavirus).
Antigenic drift = point mutations → vaccine updates (e.g., seasonal flu).
Antigenic shift = reassortment of segmented genomes → pandemic potential (e.g., 2009 H1N1).
IgM = acute infection marker; IgG = past infection / immunity marker.
Live‑attenuated vaccines → strong immunity but unsafe in immunocompromised; subunit vaccines → safe, protein‑only.
---
🔄 Key Processes
Attachment – capsid/glycoprotein binds a specific host receptor (determines host range).
Entry – endocytosis or membrane fusion (enveloped) delivers virion inside.
Uncoating – capsid removal → genome released in cytoplasm or nucleus.
Genome replication & transcription
(+)ssRNA → directly translated → RdRp made → replicates genome.
(–)ssRNA → RdRp packaged → transcribes (+)mRNA.
DNA viruses → use host or viral polymerases (nuclear or cytoplasmic).
Retroviruses → reverse transcription → integration.
Assembly – capsid proteins self‑assemble around newly made genomes.
Release –
Lysis (non‑enveloped) → cell rupture.
Budding (enveloped) → acquire lipid envelope with glycoproteins.
Lysogeny → genome stays integrated, later induced to lytic.
---
🔍 Key Comparisons
Positive‑sense RNA vs. Negative‑sense RNA
(+)RNA: can act as mRNA → immediate translation.
(–)RNA: must first be transcribed to (+)RNA by virion‑carried RdRp.
Enveloped vs. Non‑enveloped Viruses
Enveloped: acquire lipid membrane → more sensitive to detergents, heat, desiccation; entry via membrane fusion.
Non‑enveloped: stable in the environment; entry via endocytosis and capsid penetration.
Lytic vs. Lysogenic Cycle
Lytic: rapid replication, cell death, high virion output.
Lysogenic: genome integrates, replicates silently with host, can be induced.
Live‑attenuated vs. Subunit Vaccines
Live‑attenuated: mimic natural infection → strong cellular & humoral response; contraindicated in immunocompromised.
Subunit: only specific proteins → safer, weaker cellular immunity.
---
⚠️ Common Misunderstandings
“Viruses are alive” – they lack metabolism and cellular structure; they are organisms at the edge of life.
“All RNA viruses mutate rapidly” – coronaviruses have proofreading enzymes, lowering their rate.
“Antigenic drift is the same as shift” – drift = small changes; shift = wholesale genome reassortment.
“All vaccines contain live virus” – only live‑attenuated vaccines do; inactivated, subunit, mRNA, and viral‑vector vaccines do not.
“IgG means you are currently sick” – IgG indicates past exposure or vaccination, not active infection.
---
🧠 Mental Models / Intuition
“Key‑lock” model for entry – viral surface spikes = key; host receptor = lock. Specificity = host range.
“Factory line” model for replication – attachment → entry → uncoating = raw material delivery; genome replication = assembly line; release = shipping.
“Quasispecies cloud” – imagine a swarm of similar viruses; the cloud’s shape shifts under immune pressure or drugs, explaining rapid adaptation.
---
🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases
Retroviral integration – only retroviruses (Class VI) and Hepadnaviruses (Class VII) integrate DNA into host genome.
Proofreading RdRp – coronaviruses possess exonuclease activity, reducing mutation rate compared to most RNA viruses.
Ambisense genomes – transcription occurs from both strands after a double‑stranded intermediate (e.g., arenaviruses).
Segmented genomes – only viruses with segmented RNA (influenza, rotavirus) can undergo reassortment (antigenic shift).
---
📍 When to Use Which
Diagnosing acute infection – test for IgM (early) vs. IgG (past).
Choosing antiviral class – if virus uses a polymerase without proofreading → nucleoside analogues are effective; if protease needed for maturation → protease inhibitor.
Vaccine strategy for immunocompromised – use subunit or inactivated vaccines, avoid live‑attenuated.
Public‑health control – high‑density settings → focus on vaccination + isolation; water‑borne outbreaks → sanitation + oral vaccines.
---
👀 Patterns to Recognize
Segmented genome + sudden emergence of a novel strain → suspect antigenic shift (pandemic risk).
Rapid point‑mutation accumulation in surface glycoproteins → antigenic drift (seasonal vaccine update).
Presence of envelope glycoprotein spikes in EM images → likely enveloped virus, predicts sensitivity to detergents.
High mutation rate + RNA genome → expect quasispecies and potential drug resistance.
---
🗂️ Exam Traps
“All RNA viruses have high mutation rates” – overlook coronaviruses’ proofreading.
“IgM always appears before IgG” – some infections show simultaneous or delayed IgM; timing varies.
“Lysogenic cycle always leads to disease” – many prophages are silent; disease only when induced.
“All viruses with a lipid envelope are fragile” – some enveloped viruses (e.g., poxviruses) are relatively stable.
“Antigenic drift = new virus” – drift changes antigenicity but does not create a new species; shift does.
---
or
Or, immediately create your own study flashcards:
Upload a PDF.
Master Study Materials.
Master Study Materials.
Start learning in seconds
Drop your PDFs here or
or