+353-1-416-8900REST OF WORLD
+44-20-3973-8888REST OF WORLD
1-917-300-0470EAST COAST U.S
1-800-526-8630U.S. (TOLL FREE)

Principles of Virology, Volume 1. Molecular Biology. Edition No. 5. ASM Books

  • Book

  • 608 Pages
  • September 2020
  • John Wiley and Sons Ltd
  • ID: 5838195
Principles of Virology, the leading virology textbook in use, is an extremely valuable and highly informative presentation of virology at the interface of modern cell biology and immunology. This text utilizes a uniquely rational approach by highlighting common principles and processes across all viruses. Using a set of representative viruses to illustrate the breadth of viral complexity, students are able to under-stand viral reproduction and pathogenesis and are equipped with the necessary tools for future encounters with new or understudied viruses.

This fifth edition was updated to keep pace with the ever-changing field of virology. In addition to the beloved full-color illustrations, video interviews with leading scientists, movies, and links to exciting blogposts on relevant topics, this edition includes study questions and active learning puzzles in each chapter, as well as short descriptions regarding the key messages of references of special interest. 

Volume I: Molecular Biology focuses on the molecular processes of viral reproduction, from entry through release. Volume II: Pathogenesis and Control addresses the interplay between viruses and their host organisms, on both the micro- and macroscale, including chapters on public health, the immune response, vaccines and other antiviral strategies, viral evolution, and a brand new chapter on the therapeutic uses of viruses. These two volumes can be used for separate courses or together in a single course. Each includes a unique appendix, glossary, and links to internet resources.

Principles of Virology, Fifth Edition, is ideal for teaching the strategies by which all viruses reproduce, spread within a host, and are maintained within populations. This edition carefully reflects the results of extensive vetting and feedback received from course instructors and students, making this renowned textbook even more appropriate for undergraduate and graduate courses in virology, microbiology, and infectious diseases.

Table of Contents

Preface xvii

Acknowledgments xxi

About the Authors xxiii

Key of Repetitive Elements xxv

Part I The Science of Virology 1

1 Foundations 2

Luria’s Credo 3

Viruses Defined 3

Why We Study Viruses 3

Viruses Are Everywhere 3

Viruses Infect All Living Things 4

Viruses Can Cause Human Disease 5

Viruses Can Be Beneficial 5

Viruses “R” Us 6

Viruses Can Cross Species Boundaries 6

Viruses Are Unique Tools To Study Biology 6

Virus Prehistory 7

Viral Infections in Antiquity 7

The First Vaccines 8

Microorganisms as Pathogenic Agents 9

Discovery of Viruses 11

The Defining Properties of Viruses 13

The Structural Simplicity of Virus Particles 13

The Intracellular Parasitism of Viruses 13

Cataloging Animal Viruses 18

The Classical System 18

Classification by Genome Type: the Baltimore System 19

A Common Strategy for Viral Propagation 21

Perspectives 21

References 24

Study Questions 24

2 The Infectious Cycle 26

Introduction 27

The Infectious Cycle 27

The Cell 27

Entering Cells 28

Viral RNA Synthesis 29

Viral Protein Synthesis 29

Viral Genome Replication 29

Assembly of Progeny Virus Particles 29

Viral Pathogenesis 29

Overcoming Host Defenses 30

Cultivation of Viruses 30

Cell Culture 30

Embryonated Eggs 35

Laboratory Animals 35

Assay of Viruses 35

Measurement of Infectious Units 35

Efficiency of Plating 38

Measurement of Virus Particles 40

Viral Reproduction: The Burst Concept 49

The One-Step Growth Cycle 49

One-Step Growth Analysis: a Valuable Tool for Studying Animal Viruses 52

Global Analysis 53

DNA Microarrays 54

Mass Spectrometry 56

Protein-Protein Interactions 56

Single-Cell

Virology 56

Perspectives 58

References 59

Study Questions 60

Part II Molecular Biology 61

3 Genomes and Genetics 62

Introduction 63

Genome Principles and the Baltimore System 63

Structure and Complexity of Viral Genomes 63

DNA Genomes 64

RNA Genomes 65

What Do Viral Genomes Look Like? 68

Coding Strategies 69

What Can Viral Sequences Tell Us? 69

The “Big and Small” of Viral Genomes: Does Size Matter? 71

The Origin of Viral Genomes 73

Genetic Analysis of Viruses 74

Classical Genetic Methods 75

Engineering Mutations into Viral Genomes 77

Engineering Viral Genomes: Viral Vectors 83

Perspectives 87

References 87

Study Questions 88

4 Structure 90

Introduction 91

Functions of the Virion 91

Nomenclature 92

Methods for Studying Virus Structure 92

Building a Protective Coat 95

Helical Structures 96

Capsids with Icosahedral Symmetry 99

Other Capsid Architectures 111

Packaging the Nucleic Acid Genome 112

Direct Contact of the Genome with a Protein Shell 112

Packaging by Specialized Viral Proteins 113

Packaging by Cellular Proteins 113

Viruses with Envelopes 115

Viral Envelope Components 115

Simple Enveloped Viruses: Direct Contact of External Proteins with the Capsid or Nucleocapsid 117

Enveloped Viruses with an Additional Protein Layer 118

Large Viruses with Multiple Structure Elements 119

Particles with Helical or Icosahedral Parts 120

Alternative Architectures 123

Other Components of Virions 125

Enzymes 125

Other Viral Proteins 125

Cellular Macromolecules 126

Mechanical Properties of Virus Particles 126

Investigation of Mechanical Properties of Virus Particles 126

Stabilization and Destabilization of Virus Particles 128

Perspectives 128

References 129

Study Questions 130

5 Attachment and Entry 132

Introduction 133

Attachment of Virus Particles to Cells 133

General Principles 133

Identification of Receptors for Virus Particles 135

Virus-Receptor Interactions 137

Entry into Cells 142

Virus-induced Signaling via Cell Receptors 142

Routes of Entry 143

Membrane Fusion 145

Intracellular Trafficking and Uncoating 154

Movement of Viral and Subviral Particles within Cells 154

Uncoating of Enveloped Virus Particles 155

Uncoating of Nonenveloped Viruses 155

Import of Viral Genomes into the Nucleus 159

The Nuclear Pore Complex 159

Nuclear Localization Signals 159

Nuclear Import of RNA Genomes 161

Nuclear Import of DNA Genomes 162

Import of Retroviral Genomes 162

Perspectives 164

References 165

Study Questions 166

6 Synthesis of RNA from RNA Templates 168

Introduction 169

The Nature of the RNA Template 169

Secondary Structures in Viral RNA 169

Naked or Nucleocapsid RNA 170

The RNA Synthesis Machinery 171

Identification of RNA-Dependent RNA Polymerases 171

Three-Dimensional Structures of RNA-Dependent RNA Polymerases 173

Mechanisms of RNA Synthesis 176

Initiation 176

Capping 179

Elongation 179

Functions of Additional Polymerase Domains 181

RNA Polymerase Oligomerization 181

Template Specificity 182

Unwinding the RNA Template 182

Role of Cellular Proteins 183

Paradigms for Viral RNA Synthesis 183

(+) Strand RNA 184

Synthesis of Nested Subgenomic mRNAs 184

(-) Strand RNA 185

Ambisense RNA 189

Double-Stranded RNA 189

Unique Mechanisms of mRNA and Genome Synthesis of Hepatitis Delta Virus 190

Do Ribosomes and RNA Polymerases Collide? 192

Origins of Diversity in RNA Virus Genomes 193

Misincorporation of Nucleotides 193

Segment Reassortment and RNA Recombination 193

RNA Editing 194

Perspectives 195

References 196

Study Questions 197

7 Synthesis of RNA from DNA Templates 198

Introduction 199

Properties of Cellular RNA Polymerases That Transcribe Viral DNA 199

Some Viral Genomes Must Be Converted to Templates Suitable for Transcription 200

Transcription by RNA Polymerase II 201

Regulation of RNA Polymerase II Transcription 203

Common Properties of Proteins That Regulate Transcription 206

Transcription of Viral DNA Templates by the Cellular Machinery Alone 208

Viral Proteins That Govern Transcription of DNA Templates 209

Patterns of Regulation 209

The Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 Tat Protein Autoregulates Transcription 211

The Transcriptional Cascades of DNA Viruses 217

Entry into One of Two Alternative Transcriptional Programs 226

Transcription of Viral Genes by RNA Polymerase III 230

The VA-RNA I Promoter 231

Inhibition of the Cellular Transcriptional Machinery 232

Unusual Functions of Cellular Transcription Components in Virus-Infected Cells 233

Viral DNA-Dependent RNA Polymerases 233

Perspectives 234

References 235

Study Questions 236

8 Processing 238

Introduction 239

Covalent Modification during Viral Pre-mRNA Processing 240

Capping the 5′ Ends of Viral mRNA 240

Synthesis of 3′ Poly(A) Segments of Viral mRNA 243

Internal Methylation of Adenosine Residues 245

Splicing of Viral Pre-mRNA 246

Regulated Processing of Viral Pre-mRNA 249

Editing of Viral mRNAs 255

Export of RNAs from the Nucleus 257

The Cellular Export Machinery 257

Export of Viral mRNA 258

Posttranscriptional Regulation of Viral or Cellular Gene Expression by Viral Proteins 262

Temporal Control of Viral Gene Expression 262

Viral Proteins Can Inhibit Cellular mRNA Production 264

Regulation of Turnover of Viral and Cellular mRNAs in the Cytoplasm 266

Intrinsic Turnover 266

Regulation of mRNA Stability by Viral Proteins 267

mRNA Stabilization Can Facilitate Transformation 267

Nonsense-Mediated mRNA Decay 267

Noncoding RNAs 271

Small Interfering RNAs and Micro-RNAs 271

Long Noncoding RNAs 276

Circular RNAs 278

Perspectives 278

References 279

Study Questions 281

9 Replication of DNA Genomes 282

Introduction 283

DNA Synthesis by the Cellular Replication Machinery 284

Eukaryotic Replicons 284

Cellular Replication Proteins 287

Mechanisms of Viral DNA Synthesis 287

Lessons from Simian Virus 40 288

Replication of Other Viral DNA Genomes 290

Properties of Viral Replication Origins 294

Recognition of Viral Replication Origins 296

Viral DNA Synthesis Machines 301

Resolution and Processing of Viral Replication Products 301

Exponential Accumulation of Viral Genomes 302

Viral Proteins Can Induce Synthesis of Cellular Replication Proteins 303

Synthesis of Viral Replication Machines and Accessory Enzymes 304

Viral DNA Replication Independent of Cellular Proteins 304

Delayed Synthesis of Structural Proteins Prevents Premature Packaging of DNA Templates 305

Inhibition of Cellular DNA Synthesis 305

Synthesis of Viral DNA in Specialized Intracellular Compartments 305

Limited Replication of Viral DNA Genomes 308

Integrated Parvoviral DNA Can Be Replicated as Part of the Cellular Genome 308

Different Viral Origins Regulate Replication of Epstein-Barr Virus 310

Limited and Amplifying Replication from a Single Origin: the Papillomaviruses 313

Origins of Genetic Diversity in DNA Viruses 315

Fidelity of Replication by Viral DNA Polymerases 315

Modulation of the DNA Damage Response 316

Recombination of Viral Genomes 318

Perspectives 321

References 321

Study Questions 323

10 Reverse Transcription and Integration 324

Retroviral Reverse Transcription 325

Discovery 325

Impact 325

The Process of Reverse Transcription 326

General Properties and Structure of Retroviral Reverse Transcriptases 334

Other Examples of Reverse Transcription 337

Retroviral DNA Integration 340

The Pathway of Integration: Integrase-Catalyzed Steps 341

Integrase Structure and Mechanism 347

Hepadnaviral Reverse Transcription 350

A DNA Virus with Reverse Transcriptase 350

The Process of Hepadnaviral Reverse Transcription 352

Perspectives 358

References 359

Study Questions 360

11 Protein Synthesis 362

Introduction 363

Mechanisms of Eukaryotic Protein Synthesis 363

General Structure of Eukaryotic mRNA 363

The Translation Machinery 364

Initiation 365

Elongation and Termination 375

The Diversity of Viral Translation Strategies 378

Polyprotein Synthesis 378

Leaky Scanning 378

Reinitiation 381

StopGo Translation 382

Suppression of Termination 382

Ribosomal Frameshifting 383

Bicistronic mRNAs 384

Regulation of Translation during Viral Infection 385

Inhibition of Translation Initiation after Viral Infection 385

Regulation of eIF4F 389

Regulation of Poly(A)-Binding Protein Activity 392

Regulation of eIF3 392

Interfering with RNA 392

Stress-Associated RNA Granules 393

Perspectives 395

References 396

Study Questions 397

12 Intracellular Trafficking 398

Introduction 399

Assembly within the Nucleus 400

Import of Viral Proteins for Assembly 401

Assembly at the Plasma Membrane 403

Transport of Viral Membrane Proteins to the Plasma Membrane 404

Sorting of Viral Proteins in Polarized Cells 419

Disruption of the Secretory Pathway in Virus-Infected Cells 421

Signal Sequence-Independent Transport of Viral Proteins to the Plasma Membrane 422

Interactions with Internal Cellular Membranes 426

Localization of Viral Proteins to Compartments of the Secretory Pathway 426

Localization of Viral Proteins to the Nuclear Membrane 426

Transport of Viral Genomes to Assembly Sites 427

Transport of Genomic and Pregenomic RNA from the Nucleus to the Cytoplasm 427

Transport of Genomes from the Cytoplasm to the Plasma Membrane 429

Perspectives 430

References 431

Study Questions 432

13 Assembly, Release, and Maturation 434

Introduction 435

Methods of Studying Virus Assembly and Egress 435

Structural Studies of Virus Particles 436

Visualization of Assembly and Exit by Microscopy 436

Biochemical and Genetic Analyses of Assembly Intermediates 436

Methods Based on Recombinant DNA Technology 439

Assembly of Protein Shells 439

Formation of Structural Units 439

Capsid and Nucleocapsid Assembly 441

Self-Assembly and Assisted Assembly Reactions 445

Selective Packaging of the Viral Genome and Other Components of Virus Particles 447

Concerted or Sequential Assembly 447

Recognition and Packaging of the Nucleic Acid Genome 448

Incorporation of Enzymes and Other Nonstructural Proteins 458

Acquisition of an Envelope 459

Sequential Assembly of Internal Components and Budding from a Cellular Membrane 459

Coordination of the Assembly of Internal Structures with Acquisition of the Envelope 460

Release of Virus Particles 460

Assembly and Budding at the Plasma Membrane 461

Assembly at Internal Membranes: the Problem of Exocytosis 464

Release of Nonenveloped Virus Particles 470

Maturation of Progeny Virus Particles 470

Proteolytic Processing of Structural Proteins 470

Other Maturation Reactions 474

Cell-to-Cell Spread 475

Perspectives 479

References 479

Study Questions 481

14 The Infected Cell 482

Introduction 483

Signal Transduction 483

Signaling Pathways 483

Signaling in Virus-Infected Cells 485

Gene Expression 489

Inhibition of Cellular Gene Expression 489

Differential Regulation of Cellular Gene Expression 492

Metabolism 496

Methods To Study Metabolism 496

Glucose Metabolism 497

The Citric Acid Cycle 501

Electron Transport and Oxidative Phosphorylation 502

Lipid Metabolism 504

Remodeling of Cellular Organelles 507

The Nucleus 509

The Cytoplasm 511

Perspectives 516

References 518

Study Questions 519

Appendix Structure, Genome Organization, and Infectious Cycles of Viruses Featured in This Book 521

Glossary 557

Index 563

Authors

Jane Flint Princeton University. Vincent R. Racaniello Columbia University. Glenn F. Rall Fox Chase Cancer Center; University of Pennsylvania; Thomas Jefferson University; Drexel University; Temple University. Theodora Hatziioannou Rockefeller University; Albert Einstein College of Medicine. Anna Marie Skalka Institute of Cancer Research, USA.