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Disease Unit

Disease Unit. Ms. Powell’s 8 th Grade Science Class. Types of Disease Causing Organisms. Virus Bacteria (includes Rickettsia) Protozoa (includes trypanosomes) Fungus Worms. Viruses. A small nonliving particle that invades and reproduces inside a living cell

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Disease Unit

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  1. Disease Unit Ms. Powell’s 8th Grade Science Class

  2. Types of Disease Causing Organisms • Virus • Bacteria (includes Rickettsia) • Protozoa (includes trypanosomes) • Fungus • Worms

  3. Viruses • A small nonliving particle that invades and reproduces inside a living cell • Considered nonliving because: • Viruses are not made of cells • Do not use energy to grow and develop or to respond to their environment • Do not make food, take in food or produce waste • Have ability to multiply when inside a living cell

  4. Virus Vocabulary • Host:a living thing that provides a source of energy for a virus or other organism • Parasite:organisms that live on or in a host and cause harm to the host • Active virus: enters a cell and immediately begins to multiply • Hidden virus: the genetic material lies dormant in a cell for a period of time before becoming active • Ex. Cold sore virus (Herpes) lies dormant in nerve cells

  5. Potential Hosts of Viruses • No organisms are safe from viruses • Viruses can attack: • Plants, Animals, Bacteria, Protists, Fungi • Viruses are generally very host specific • Ex. A plant virus does not attack people

  6. Naming Viruses • Viruses are not living organisms • Scientists name the virus for the disease it causes • Ex. Polio • Scientists name the virus for the organism it infects • Ex. Tomato mosaic virus • Scientists name the virus after themselves • Epstein–Barr virus ( causes mono)

  7. Virus Appearance • Very small (smaller than a bacteria -750 nm) • 22 to 250 nanometers • Shape: round, rod shaped, bricklike, threadlike, robotlike or bulletlike

  8. Structure of a Virus • Two basic parts: • Outer coat that protects the virus • Made of protein • Protein shape allows virus to lock onto certain cells • Cell surface and virus coat is like a “lock and key fit” – makes virus specific to certain cells • Inner core made of genetic material • Analogy: chocolate covered cherry

  9. Structure of Viruses

  10. Parts of a Virus

  11. Virus Photos

  12. Rhinovirus (Common Cold)

  13. Hepatitis B

  14. How Viruses Multiply • Once inside the cell the virus’s genetic material takes over the cell’s functions • The genetic material tells the cell to produce the virus’s proteins and genetic material • These proteins and genetic material are assembled into new viruses that are released from the cell

  15. How Viruses Multiply

  16. How HIV Invades a Human Cell

  17. Herpes zoster Shingles/Chickenpox

  18. Virus: Smallpox

  19. Polio Virus: Neuromuscular Damage

  20. Bacteria • Are unicellular microorganisms. • Are typically a few micrometres long • Are prokaryotes – their cells do not have nuclei • Shapes: spherical, rodlike or spiral

  21. Rod Shape, Spherical, Spiral Bacteria

  22. Bacteria • Two types: • archaebacteria – ancient bacteria • Live in hot springs and other extreme environments • Eubacteria – live everywhere else

  23. Bacteria (blue and purple rods) and other microorganisms lurk in a kitchen sponge

  24. Bubonic Plague: Bubos –swollen gland

  25. Rickettsia • Rickettsia species are a type of bacteria • Are carried as parasites by many ticks, fleas, and lice • Cause diseases such as Rocky Mountain spotted fever, and typhus in humans

  26. Rickettsia: Lyme Disease: “Bull’s Eye” Rash at Site to Tick Bite

  27. Rickettsia: Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever Rash

  28. Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever

  29. Typhus

  30. Protozoan Parasites • Protozoa (in Greekproto = first and zoa = animals) are single-celledeukaryotes (organisms whose cells have nuclei) • Commonly show characteristics usually associated with animals • Most notably mobility and heterotrophy

  31. 4 Types of Protozoa • Dinoflagellates • Cilliates • Sporozoans • Amoeba

  32. 4 Types of Protozoa - Locomotion • Flagellates are cells with one or more whip-like tail called flagella. (trypanosomes?) • Ciliates –usehair-like cilia to move (malaria) • Amoeba move by means of temporary projections called pseudopods, • Sporozoans spore-forming, parasites of animals. Motile structures such as flagella or pseudopods are absent

  33. Protozoa: Life Cycle of Malaria

  34. Mosquito Transmission of Malaria

  35. Protozoa - Trypanosomes • Undergo a complex lifecycle which may include several different morphological forms • Often transmitted by invertebrates. • African Sleeping Sickness/Tsetse fly • Chagas Disease, Triatome bug

  36. Tsetse Fly

  37. African Sleeping Sickness

  38. Trypanosome and Red Blood Cells

  39. Trypanosomiasis – Parasite Seen in Blood Sample

  40. Fungal Diseases • Eukaryoticorganisms (nucleus in cell) • Digest their food externally, absorbing nutrientmolecules into their cells. • Related to yeasts, molds, and mushrooms • Ringworm, Athletes foot, Nail fungus

  41. Fungus: Ringworm

  42. Helminths - Parasitic worms • Intestinal parasites - tape worm, pin worm • Onchocerciasis/River Blindness is an infection caused by the parasite Onchocerca volvulus (worm) • Spread by the bite of an infected blackfly. • Lymphatic filariasis

  43. African River Blindness - ParsiticWorm

  44. Parasitic Worm: Lymphatic Filariasis

  45. Parasitic worm

  46. Parasitic Worm: Liver Fluke

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