Knowlet

Unit 2: Virology and Bacteriology

1. Viruses: General Characteristics and Distribution

Definition: Viruses are non-cellular, infectious agents consisting of a nucleic acid core (DNA or RNA) enclosed in a protein coat (capsid). They are obligate intracellular parasites, meaning they can only replicate inside a living host cell.
  • Non-cellular: They lack cytoplasm, organelles, and a cell membrane. They cannot metabolize or reproduce on their own.
  • Living vs. Non-living: They have characteristics of both. They possess genetic material (like living things) but are inert and can be crystallized (like non-living chemicals) outside a host.
  • Structure: A complete virus particle is called a virion.
    • Nucleic Acid: Can be DNA or RNA, single-stranded (ss) or double-stranded (ds).
    • Capsid: A protein shell that protects the nucleic acid. Composed of subunits called capsomeres.
    • Envelope (some viruses): A lipid membrane derived from the host cell that surrounds the capsid.
  • Distribution: Viruses are ubiquitous. They infect all forms of life, including animals, plants, fungi, and bacteria (viruses that infect bacteria are called bacteriophages).

2. Salient Features: Viroids and Prions

These are "sub-viral" infectious agents, even simpler than viruses.

Viroids

  • Structure: They are small, circular, single-stranded RNA molecules.
  • Key Feature: They are "naked" RNA—they have no protein capsid.
  • Replication: They replicate within the host nucleus or chloroplast, using the host's RNA polymerase.
  • Host: They are known to cause diseases only in plants (e.g., Potato spindle tuber viroid - PSTV).

Prions

  • Structure: They are infectious protein particles.
  • Key Feature: They contain no nucleic acid (no DNA or RNA).
  • Mechanism: A prion is a misfolded version (PrPSc) of a normal cellular protein (PrPC). When the prion enters a cell, it causes the normal PrPC proteins to misfold into the prion form (PrPSc), leading to a chain reaction and protein aggregation that damages nerve tissue.
  • Host: They cause fatal neurodegenerative diseases called Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathies (TSEs) in mammals.
    • In humans: Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD)
    • In cattle: "Mad Cow Disease" (Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy - BSE)
    • In sheep: Scrapie
Exam Tip: A common question is to differentiate viruses, viroids, and prions. Focus on their composition:
  • Virus: Protein + Nucleic Acid
  • Viroid: RNA only
  • Prion: Protein only

3. Structure and Replication (T-phages and TMV)

T-phages (e.g., T4 Bacteriophage)

  • Host: Bacteria (e.g., *E. coli*).
  • Structure: A complex symmetry.
    • Head: An icosahedral capsid containing dsDNA.
    • Tail: A hollow sheath (like a syringe) surrounded by a contractile sheath.
    • Base Plate: At the bottom of the tail, with tail fibers and pins that recognize and attach to the host cell.
  • Replication (Lytic Cycle):
    1. Attachment (Adsorption): Tail fibers bind to specific receptors on the *E. coli* cell wall.
    2. Penetration (Injection): The sheath contracts, and the tail core injects the viral DNA into the bacterium. The capsid remains outside.
    3. Synthesis: The host cell's machinery (ribosomes, enzymes) is "hijacked" to transcribe and translate viral genes, producing viral proteins and replicating viral DNA.
    4. Assembly (Maturation): New viral heads, tails, and DNA are assembled into new, complete virions.
    5. Lysis (Release): The virus produces an enzyme (lysozyme) that degrades the bacterial cell wall, causing the cell to burst (lyse) and release hundreds of new phages.

Tobacco Mosaic Virus (TMV)

  • Host: Plants (e.g., tobacco).
  • Structure: A simple helical symmetry.
    • It's a rigid, rod-shaped virus.
    • Consists of a single-stranded RNA (ssRNA) genome.
    • The RNA is coiled in a helix, with protein capsomeres arranged around it, forming a protective tube (the capsid).
  • Replication (in plants):
    1. Entry: Enters the plant cell through a wound or damage (e.g., from an insect).
    2. Uncoating: The capsid disassembles, releasing the viral ssRNA into the cytoplasm.
    3. Synthesis: The viral RNA acts as mRNA and is translated by host ribosomes to make viral proteins (including an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase).
    4. Replication: The viral RNA polymerase makes new copies of the viral RNA.
    5. Assembly: New capsomeres and viral RNA self-assemble into new TMV virions.
    6. Spread: The virus moves to adjacent cells through plasmodesmata.

4. Methods of Transmission of Viruses

Transmission in Plants

  • Mechanical Transmission: Through wounds caused by wind, handling, or tools.
  • Vectors (Biological): This is the most common way.
    • Insects: Aphids, whiteflies, and leafhoppers are common vectors. The virus may be persistent (circulates in the insect's body) or non-persistent (carried on the insect's mouthparts).
    • Nematodes & Fungi: Some soil-borne viruses are transmitted by these organisms.
  • Vegetative Propagation: Using infected cuttings, bulbs, or tubers will spread the virus to the new plant.
  • Pollen & Seed: Some viruses can be transmitted via infected pollen or seeds.

Transmission in Animals (and Humans)

  • Airborne (Respiratory): Inhaling droplets from an infected person's cough or sneeze (e.g., Influenza, COVID-19).
  • Water/Food-borne (Fecal-Oral): Ingesting water or food contaminated with feces (e.g., Polio, Hepatitis A).
  • Direct Contact: Touching, kissing, or sexual contact (e.g., Herpes, HIV).
  • Zoonosis (Animal Vectors): Transmitted from an animal to a human.
    • Bite: Rabies (from mammals).
    • Arthropods: Mosquitoes (Dengue, Zika), Ticks (Tick-borne encephalitis).
  • Blood-borne: Through contaminated blood transfusions or shared needles (e.g., HIV, Hepatitis B & C).

5. Bacteria: General Characteristics and Cell Wall

General Characteristics

  • Prokaryotic: Lack a membrane-bound nucleus and organelles.
  • Unicellular: Most are single-celled.
  • Genetic Material: A single, circular chromosome located in a region called the nucleoid. May also have small, extra-chromosomal DNA circles called plasmids.
  • Ribosomes: Have 70S ribosomes (different from eukaryotic 80S).
  • Reproduction: Primarily asexual (binary fission).
  • Cell Wall: Most bacteria have a rigid cell wall containing peptidoglycan.

Bacterial Cell Wall (Gram +ve vs. Gram -ve)

The Gram Stain (developed by Hans Christian Gram) is a critical differential stain that separates bacteria into two large groups based on their cell wall structure.

Feature Gram-Positive (G+) Bacteria Gram-Negative (G-) Bacteria
Gram Stain Result Retain crystal violet; stain purple/blue. Are decolorized; counterstain with safranin; stain pink/red.
Peptidoglycan Layer Thick (multi-layered). Thin (single-layered).
Outer Membrane Absent. Present. This membrane contains Lipopolysaccharide (LPS), which acts as an endotoxin.
Periplasmic Space Small or absent. Prominent.
Special Components Teichoic Acids and Lipoteichoic Acids (anchor the wall). LPS, Porin proteins (form channels).
Example *Staphylococcus*, *Streptococcus*, *Bacillus* *E. coli*, *Salmonella*, *Pseudomonas*

6. Bacteria: Reproduction

Bacteria reproduce asexually but can exchange genetic material horizontally.

Asexual: Binary Fission

This is the main method of bacterial reproduction. It is a process of cell division.

  1. The bacterial cell elongates.
  2. The single circular chromosome replicates, creating two identical copies.
  3. The chromosomes move to opposite ends of the cell.
  4. A septum (new cell wall) forms down the middle, dividing the cell.
  5. The result is two genetically identical daughter cells.

Genetic Recombination (Horizontal Gene Transfer)

This is *not* reproduction, but a way to create genetic diversity.

Conjugation

  • Mechanism: Direct, cell-to-cell transfer of genetic material (usually a plasmid).
  • Process: A donor cell (F+) contains a fertility plasmid (F-plasmid). It forms a sex pilus that connects to a recipient cell (F-). The F-plasmid replicates, and a copy is transferred to the F- cell, converting it to an F+ cell.
  • Hfr: In some cases, the F-plasmid integrates into the main bacterial chromosome. This is called an Hfr (High-frequency recombination) cell. When an Hfr cell conjugates, it can transfer parts of its chromosome, leading to high-level recombination.

Transformation

  • Mechanism: Uptake of "naked" DNA (fragments or plasmids) from the environment.
  • Process: Some bacteria are naturally "competent," meaning they can take up external DNA. This DNA can then be integrated into the bacterium's own chromosome.
  • Significance: First demonstrated by Griffith's experiment (1928) with *Streptococcus pneumoniae* (transforming non-virulent "R" strain to virulent "S" strain).

Transduction

  • Mechanism: Transfer of bacterial DNA from one bacterium to another via a bacteriophage (virus).
  • Process (Generalized): During phage assembly, a piece of the *host* bacterial DNA is accidentally packaged into a new phage head instead of viral DNA. When this "transducing phage" infects a new bacterium, it injects the *bacterial* DNA, which can then be incorporated by the recipient.

7. Bacteria: Economic Significance (General)

Bacteria are a "double-edged sword" with immense economic and ecological impact.

  • Beneficial (Positive):
    • Decomposition: As decomposers, they recycle nutrients (C, N, S) in ecosystems.
    • Nitrogen Fixation: Convert atmospheric N2 into ammonia (e.g., *Rhizobium*).
    • Food Industry: Fermentation to produce yogurt, cheese, pickles (*Lactobacillus*).
    • Industrial: Production of antibiotics (*Streptomyces*), enzymes, organic acids.
    • Biotechnology: Used as 'factories' to produce insulin, hormones (*E. coli*).
    • Digestion: Gut microbiome (e.g., *E. coli*) helps digest food and produces vitamins (K, B12).
  • Harmful (Negative):
    • Disease (Pathogens): Cause diseases in humans (cholera, typhoid), animals, and plants (blights, wilts).
    • Food Spoilage: Cause food to rot, resulting in economic loss.
    • Denitrification: Some bacteria convert useful nitrates back to N2 gas, reducing soil fertility.

8. Special Groups of Bacteria

Mycoplasmas and Spiroplasmas

  • Key Feature: They are bacteria that lack a cell wall.
  • Mycoplasma: Because they lack a rigid wall, they are pleomorphic (have variable shapes). Their cell membrane contains sterols (unusual for bacteria). They are the smallest free-living organisms. Cause diseases like "walking pneumonia" in humans and "Little leaf" in plants.
  • Spiroplasma: They also lack a cell wall but have a distinct helical/spiral shape and are motile (corkscrew-like motion). Often found in plants and insects.
Exam Tip: Since Mycoplasmas lack a cell wall (which contains peptidoglycan), they are naturally resistant to antibiotics like Penicillin that work by inhibiting cell wall synthesis.

Actinomycetes

  • Characteristics: Gram-positive bacteria that grow as branching, thread-like filaments, similar to fungi (hence their old name, "ray fungi").
  • Habitat: Abundant in soil, where they contribute to the "earthy" smell (geosmin).
  • Economic Importance: They are a major source of antibiotics. The genus Streptomyces alone produces over two-thirds of all clinically useful antibiotics (e.g., Streptomycin, Tetracycline, Chloramphenicol).

Archaebacteria (Domain Archaea)

  • Characteristics: Although prokaryotic, they are a separate domain from Bacteria.
  • Cell Wall: They lack peptidoglycan. Their cell wall is made of other substances (like pseudopeptidoglycan).
  • Cell Membrane: Their membrane lipids have ether linkages (not ester linkages like Bacteria and Eukarya) and branched fatty acid chains.
  • Habitat: Many are extremophiles (live in extreme environments):
    • Methanogens: Strict anaerobes, produce methane. Found in swamps, sewage, cow stomachs.
    • Halophiles: Require high salt concentrations (e.g., Great Salt Lake).
    • Thermophiles/Hyperthermophiles: Thrive at very high temperatures (e.g., hot springs, deep-sea hydrothermal vents).

9. Economic Importance of Specific Genera

Genus Key Importance
Streptomyces (Actinomycete) Produces numerous antibiotics (Streptomycin, Tetracycline, Erythromycin) and other bioactive compounds.
E. coli (Escherichia coli) Model organism for genetic research. Used in biotechnology to produce recombinant proteins (like human insulin). Also an indicator of fecal water contamination. (Some strains are pathogenic).
Bacillus *B. thuringiensis* (Bt) produces a protein (Bt toxin) used as a natural biopesticide. *B. subtilis* is used to produce enzymes (e.g., amylase). *B. anthracis* causes anthrax.
Lactobacillus A probiotic. Used in fermentation to produce dairy products like yogurt, cheese, and kefir by fermenting lactose to lactic acid.
Agrobacterium *A. tumefaciens* is a plant pathogen (causes crown gall disease). Its Ti plasmid is used as a vector in plant genetic engineering to transfer genes into plant cells.
Rhizobium Forms a symbiotic relationship with legumes (peas, beans). It lives in root nodules and performs biological nitrogen fixation (N2 -> NH3), acting as a natural biofertilizer.
Azotobacter A free-living (non-symbiotic) bacterium in the soil that also performs biological nitrogen fixation, enriching the soil.

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