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RESPIRATORY VIRUSES

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RESPIRATORY VIRUSES. Including…. Orthomyxoviridae( 正粘病毒科 ) : Influenza virus Paramyxoviridae( 副粘病毒科 ): Respiratory syncytial virus(RSV),measles virus, mumps virus. Other viruses rhinovirus,adenovirus,coronavirus…. INFLUENZA VIRUS. RNA virus, genome consists of 8 segments - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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RESPIRATORY VIRUSES
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Page 1: RESPIRATORY VIRUSES

RESPIRATORY VIRUSES

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Including…

• Orthomyxoviridae( 正粘病毒科 ) : Influenza virus• Paramyxoviridae( 副粘病毒科 ): Respiratory syncytial virus(RSV),measles virus, m

umps virus.• Other viruses rhinovirus,adenovirus,coronavirus…

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INFLUENZA VIRUS• RNA virus, genome consists of 8 seg

ments• enveloped virus, with haemagglutinin

and neuraminidase spikes• 3 types: A, B, and C• Type A undergoes antigenic shift and

drift.• Type B undergoes antigenic drift onl

y and type C is relatively stable

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Biological Properties

Segment Protein Function

1 PB2 Polymerase component

2 PB1 Polymerase component

3 PA Polymerase component

4 HA Hemagglutinin, viral attachment protein, fusion protein, target of neutralizing antibody

5 NP Nucleocapsid

6 NA Neuraminidase (cleaves sialic acid and promotes virus release)

7 M1 Matrix protein:Viral structural protein (interacts with nucleocapsid and envelope, promotes assembly)

M2 Membrane protein (forms membrane channel and target for amantadine facilitates uncoating and HA production)

8 NS1 Nonstructural protein (inhibits cellular mRNA translation)

NS2 Nonstructural protein (important but unknown function)

Structure and Composition

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HA

NA

PB2PB1PA

NP

RNA

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Antigen Soluble antigens: include ribonucleoprotein and M p

rotein which are much stable in antigenicity. Influenza viruses are divided into 3 groups determined by the ribonucleoprotein (RNP) antigen and M antigen: • Group A - This group is the cause of epidemics and pandemics and has an avian intermediate host (IH)• Group B - This group causes epidemics and has no IH• Group C - This group does not cause epidemics and causes mild disease• Surface antigens: include HA and NA which are mu

ch variable in antigenicity. According to antigenicity of HA and NA, influenza

virus is divided into subtypes such as HnNm( H1N2, et al )

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TYPE A

++++yesyesyesshift, driftyessensitivesensitive2

severity of illnessanimal reservoirhuman pandemicshuman epidemicsantigenic changessegmented genomeamantadine, rimantidinezanamivirsurface glycoproteins

TYPE B

++nonoyesdriftyesno effectsensitive2

TYPE C

+nonono (sporadic)driftyesno effect

(1)

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Epidemic

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Pathogenesis and Immunity

• Influenza virus spread rapid via aerial droplets and fomites with inhalation into the pharynx or lower respiratory tract.

• fever, myalgia, headache, pharyngitis, cough and prostration

• cell-mediated immune response is important, IgG and IgA are important in protection against reinfection

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where do “new” HA and NA come from?

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why do we not have influenza B pandemics?

• so far no shifts have been recorded

• no animal reservoir known

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Laboratory Diagnosis • Detection of Antigen - a hemagglutination inhibition

serologic test and ELISA.

• Virus Isolation - virus may be readily isolated from nasopharyngeal aspirates and throat swabs. The virus is generally isolated in primary monkey kidney cell cultures, the Madin-Darby canine kidney cell line, or embryonated eggs.

• Identify the influenza genome - RT-PCR

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Treatment and Prevention

• prevented by active immunization with a polyvalent killed or subunit vaccine

• Amantadine, Zanamivir and oseltamivir

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PARAMYXOVIRUSES • Paramyxoviruses are spherical,

enveloped viruses with a single helical nucleocapsid containing single-stranded, negative-sense RNA.

• a fusion (F) protein and a viral attachment protein (hemagglutinin-neuraminidase [HN], hemagglutinin [H], or G protein).

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Important properties of paramyxoviruses.

• Virion: Spherical, pleomorphic, 150 nm or more in diameter (helical nucleocapsid, 13–18 nm)

• Composition: RNA (1%), protein (73%), lipid (20%),carbohydrate (6%)

• Genome: Single-stranded RNA, linear, nonsegmented, negative-sense, noninfectious, about 15 kb

• Proteins: Six to eight structural proteins• Envelope: Contains viral hemagglutinin (HN) glycoprotei

n (which sometimes carries neuraminidase activity) and fusion (F) glycoprotein; very fragile

• Replication: Cytoplasm; particles bud from plasma membrane

• Outstanding characteristics: Antigenically stable/ Particles are labile yet highly infectious

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Characteristics of genera in the subfamilies of the family Paramyxoviridae.

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Measles virus

• Highly contagious, only one serotype and infects only humans

• The prodrome starts with high fever, cough, coryza, conjunctivitis and photophobia

• Typical mucous membrane lesions-Koplik's spots

• Exanthema of measles spreads over the body

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54

MEASLES - Koplik’s spots

Murray et al. Medical Microbiology

56

MEASLES - RASH

CDC - B.Rice Murray et al. Medical Microbiology

56

DISEASE• FEVER• RESPIRATORY TRACT SYMPTOMS

• rhinorrhea, cough

• KOPLIK’S SPOTS• MACULOPAPULAR RASH

• T-cells ->endothelial cells

• CONJUNCTIVITIS• epithelial cells

56

MEASLES GIANT CELL PNEUMONIA

Murray et al. Medical Microbiology

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Measles virus• complication : pneumonia, encephalomyelitis, Subacute

sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE)

• prevented by a live attenuated measles vaccine to children; immune globulin to exposed susceptible people

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Natural history of measles

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Mumps virus(腮腺炎病毒)

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Mumps virus

• cause of acute, benign viral parotitis 耳下腺炎 - a very communicable disease with only one serotype, and it infects only humans.

• spread by direct person-to-person • incubation period may range from 7 days to 25 days but is

typically about 18 days • may affect the testes and ovaries, causing swelling and

pain especially after puberty. Orchitis can result in sterility. • immunity is permanent • prevented by a live attenuated vaccine (MMR)

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Mims et al., Medical Microbiology 1993

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Parainfluenza virus • Types 1, 2, and 3 cause of severe lower respiratory t

ract infection in infants and young children. Type 4 causes only mild upper respiratory tract infection in children and adults

• transmitted by person-to-person

• Primary infections usually occur in infants and children younger than 5 years

• reinfections occur throughout life, indicating that immunity is short-lived

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Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)

• no haemagglutinin or neuraminidase or hemolytic properties

• induces many large syncytia with cytoplasmic inclusions

• cause any respiratory tract illness, from a common cold to pneumonia

• pathologic effect-due to direct viral invasion of the respiratory epithelium, which is followed by immunologically mediated cell injury.

• No vaccine is currently available for RSV prophylaxis.

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Human metapneumovirus

• Newly isolation: 2001.• Respiratory infections.• Failed to grow on cell culture.• RT-PCR

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Nipah virus & Hendra virus

• Genus:Henipavirus 2002• Isolation:1999. zoonotic virus.• 120-500nm,not segmented,6 structural genes.• Natural host: 马来大狐蝠• It has caused disease in animals and in humans, through

contact with infectious animals. • Fever , headache , encephalitis…• High mortality rate.

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RUBELLA VIRUS • a member of the Togaviridae family • It cause German measles, a systemic infection characterized by

lymphadenopathy and morbilliform rash • transmitted via respiratory droplets and from mother to fetus

transplacentally • congenital rubella syndrome (CRS), cataracts, heart defects, sensorine

ural deafness, mental retardation• lifelong immunity • No treatment has been found for rubella • The best means of preventing rubella is vaccination with the live

attenuated vaccine

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Natural history of primary rubella infection:virus production and antibody responses.

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Adenovirus

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ADENOVIRUS

• 100 serotypes, at least 51 of which infect humans, classified into six species

• nonenveloped with an icosahedral nucleocapsid comprises 240 capsomeres, which consist of hexons and pentons

• spread by droplet, fomites and ingestion • causing lytic (e.g. muco-epithelial cells), latent (e.g. lymph

oid and adenoid cells), and transforming (hamster, not human)

• respiratory tract infection, conjunctivitis (pink eye), hemorrhagic cystitis, and gastroenteritis

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Disease At RiskAcute Respiratory Illness Military recruits, boarding schools,

Pharyngitis Infants

Gastroenteritis Infants

Conjunctivitis All

Pneumonia Infants, military recruits

Keratoconjunctivitis All

Acute Haemorrhagic Cystitis Infants

Hepatitis Infants, liver transplant

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swimming pool conjunctivitis

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CORONAVIRUS • Enveloped, pleomorphic morphology• 2 serogroups: OC43 and 229E• In March 2003, a novel coronavirus (SAR

S-CoV) was discovered in association with the outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)

• SARS is a form of atypical pnermonia characterized by high fever (>38C), chills, rigors, headache, dizziness, malaise, and myalgia, cough or breathing difficulty, and a history of exposure to a person or place associated with SARS within the previous 10 days

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RHINOVIRUS

• belonging to the family Picornaviridae, more than 100 serotypes

• cause of the common cold and upper respiratory tract infections

• infections are self-limited and do not cause serious disease

• transmitted by two mechanisms, as aerosols and on fomites (e.g. by hands or on contaminated inanimate objects

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