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Poxviruses

Poxviruses. Chapter 34. Properties of Poxviruses. Core. Envelope. Lateral bodies. Structure and composition Largest viruses dsDNA, 130-375 kb Brick shaped “ dumbbell ” core (contains nucleic acid) Lateral bodies (unknown function) Enveloped Resistant to inactivation

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Poxviruses

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  1. Poxviruses • Chapter 34

  2. Properties of Poxviruses Core Envelope Lateral bodies • Structure and composition • Largest viruses • dsDNA, 130-375 kb • Brick shaped • “dumbbell” core (contains nucleic acid) • Lateral bodies (unknown function) • Enveloped • Resistant to inactivation • More than 100 polypeptides • Many target the immune response • Replicate in cytoplasm • Tend to be highly species-specific • Some are being explored as gene therapy vectors

  3. ClassificationFamily Poxviridae

  4. Replication • Attachment, penetration and uncoating • Membrane fusion • Viral core dissociates, releasing • Viral DNA • Viral enzymes • Virally-encoded RNA polymerase (prepackaged) synthesizes early mRNA • Early proteins • DNA polymerase • Thymidine kinase • Recombinase? • Maturation • Structural proteins are synthesized • Virus synthesizes its own membranes • Some virus exits by budding, but most when the cell dies

  5. Smallpox • Named smallpox to discriminate it from largepox (syphilis) • Noanimal reservoir • Two species • Variola major (20% fatality; Genbank #VVCGAA) • Variola minor (1-2% fatality; Genbank #VMVY16780) • Smallpox has shaped civilization • Earliest evidence: Egyptian mummies • Ramses V (1157 BC) • Introduced to the Americas by European explorers • British army used smallpox as a biological weapon against the Pontiac Indians • About 40 million native Americans died from European diseases, including smallpox • Native Americans have limited MHC polymorphisms • Killed 300 million people in the 20th century alone • Total fatalities probably near 1 billion

  6. Smallpox • Control and Eradication • Vaccine • Edward Jenner observed that milkmaids rarely contracted smallpox • All had recalled earlier cowpox infections, which were nearly universal in milkmaids • Cowpox only causes a mild infection in humans • Jenner hypothesized that the infectious agent of cowpox protected against smallpox • He inoculated a nephew by scarification with cowpox crusts • termed variolation • Today’s vaccine is live attenuated vaccinia virus • Vaccinia’s genome looks similar to cowpox, but it is not identical • In the 1950s, the Soviets proposed a global eradication program to the United Nations • Some have suggested that the Soviets had a vaccine-resistant strain of variola, which could be used as a bioweapon • The World Health Organization (WHO) Intensified Smallpox Eradication Programme program began in 1967 • Smallpox was declared eradicated in 1980 (last case in 1977) • Only two nations are supposed to have smallpox viruses today • United States (CDC-Atlanta) • Russia (VECTOR, Moscow)

  7. Smallpox Pathogenesis • Respiratory transmission • Incubation period 10-14 days • After day 7 or so, humans begin shedding virus asymptomatically • Principal reason for rapid spread • Outbreaks tended to be in clusters • Allowed the ring immunization containment strategy during the eradication program • Clinical symptoms • Fever • Malaise • Centrifugally-distributed exanthems • macules • papules • pustules

  8. Clinical progression of smallpox

  9. Smallpox Pathogenesis in an Animal Model • Problem: Smallpox virus was only known to infect humans • Can an animal model be developed to study pathogenesis? • No cases of smallpox since the 1970s • Modern science could learn much from studying the course of infection and immune response in an animal model • Because of 9/11, CDC and USAMRIID Scientists were granted permission by the WHO to infect cynomolgus macaques with smallpox in an attempt to assess pathogenesis using contemporary laboratory techniques • Jahrling et al. PNAS. 101:15196-15200 • Rubins et al. PNAS. 101:15190-15195 • Required highest containment: BSL-4 • Required >109 pfu iv for infection • Resulted in fulminant disease fatal in most monkeys

  10. Fig. 2. Gross lesions associated with smallpox virus infection of monkeys. (a)Hemorrhage on the serosal surface of the distal colon, monkey I-7, 6 days after exposure. Note the diffuse petechial hemorrhages and hemorrhagic, colic lymph nodes.(b)Mucosal surface of the distal colon described in a. Note the severe congestion, hemorrhage, and hemorrhagic colic lymph nodes. (c) Medial surface of the right arm of monkey I-4, 9 days after exposure. Smallpox pustules are predominantly discrete with occasional coalescence. Pock lesions developed synchronously and were more numerous distally, which is consistent with centrifugal distribution. (d) Palmar surface of the left hand of a monkey 11 days after exposure. Discrete and coalescing pustules retained integrity due to heavily keratinized palmar and digital epidermis. (e) Upper lip and nostrils from a cynomolgus monkey 11 days after exposure. Note synchronous development of pustules, some of which have umbilicated. Pustules that formed on the lightly keratinized mucosal surfaces of the nostrils have already ulcerated, resulting in dried exudates. Jahrling et al.

  11. Fig. 4. Immunofluorescence examination of tissues from nonhuman primates infected with variola. (a) Staining for monocytes/macrophages (green) and viral antigen (red) indicated the presence of infected monocytes/macrophages (gold) in the lymphoid tissues (lymph node shown) and in circulation. (b) In addition to monocytes/macrophages, virus-infected endothelial cells (green) were readily observed. (c) Staining for monocytes/macrophages (green) and apoptosis (red) revealed the presence of numerous tingible body macrophages in lymphoid tissues. The majority of apoptotic cells were not monocytes/macrophages but instead were lymphocytes. A rare apoptotic monocyte/macrophage (arrow) is shown. (d) A monocyte/macrophage with a clearly stained nonapoptotic nucleus (blue) is shown engulfing two separate apototic bodies. Jahrling et al.

  12. Fig. 5. Concentrations of D dimers, cytokines, and chemokines sequentially obtained from variola-infected monkeys. (a) D dimers (µg/ml) in sera of monkeys that received graded doses of variola strain India 1724 i.v. (b) IL-8 concentrations (pg/ml). (c) Monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 concentrations (pg/ml). (d) Macrophage inflammatory protein 1 concentrations (pg/ml). (e) IL-6 concentrations (pg/ml) in the sera of three monkeys infected i.v. with Harper strain (109 pfu). (f) Mean (± 1 SD) IFN- concentrations (pg/ml) in sera of monkeys infected i.v. with India 7124 and Harper strains (109 pfu). Jahrling et al.

  13. Host Genes Expressed During Smallpox

  14. Smallpox as a Biological Weapon • Variola viruses do not exist in nature • Some nations are suspected of having active bioweapons programs • North Korea • Syria • Iran • Israel • Russia • Some may have kept smallpox stocks hidden • The world is ill-prepared for smallpox • Vaccination is no longer routine • Thus, a large susceptible population

  15. Monkeypox • 2003 US Outbreak • 72 Cases • Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana • Kansas, Missouri, Ohio • Introduced from Africa to US pet supplier • Gambian giant rat • Prairie dogs • Infection was not fatal to humans • In Africa, disease is fatal in 1-10% of cases • Democratic Republic of Congo - 10% • West Africa - 1-2% • The US strain was from west Africa • Genomic comparisons revealed 5 genes mutant or missing in West African strains compared to central African strains • WA strains do not have D14L, a protein that disables complement enzyme activity, while central African do

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