5.6 Sexually Transmitted Infections HIV

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36 Terms

1
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What type of genome does HIV have?

Single-stranded RNA

2
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What shape is the HIV capsid?

Irregular cone-shaped capsid

3
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What three viral enzymes are packaged inside the HIV capsid?

Reverse transcriptase, integrase, protease

4
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What two proteins make up the HIV spike?

gp120 and gp41

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What does gp120 bind to?

CD4 receptor on T-helper cells

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What does gp41 bind to?

CCR5 co-receptor

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What happens in people with the CCR5-delta32 mutation?

HIV entry is blocked because CCR5 is nonfunctional

8
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What allows HIV to fuse with the host membrane?

gp41 activation after binding CCR5

9
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What does reverse transcriptase do?

Converts HIV RNA into DNA provirus

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What does integrase do?

Inserts the provirus into the host chromosome permanently

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What are HIV polyproteins?

Large protein chains that must be cut by protease to form functional viral proteins

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Why are protease enzymes required?

They mature new viruses by cutting polyproteins into final proteins

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What is viral maturation?

Final processing of HIV proteins by protease so virus can replicate

14
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What happens if protease is inhibited?

Immature HIV virions are produced that cannot replicate

15
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What are the three stages of HIV pathogenesis?

Acute phase, chronic phase, AIDS

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What happens during the acute phase?

High viral load, drop in T-helper cells, mild flu-like symptoms

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How long does the acute phase last?

~3 months

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Why can't HIV be eliminated from the body?

The provirus is permanently integrated into host DNA

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What happens during the chronic phase?

Gradual loss of T-helper cells over 7-10 years, usually asymptomatic

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At what T-helper cell level does AIDS begin?

200 cells/mL of blood

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What defines AIDS?

Immune failure causing inability to fight infections or cancers

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Common symptoms of AIDS

Recurrent respiratory infections, wasting, prolonged diarrhea

23
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Reservoirs for HIV

Human hosts or carriers

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Portals of exit for HIV

Blood, sexual secretions, breastmilk

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Modes of transmission for HIV

Direct contact (sex), vehicle (needles/equipment), vertical (placenta, childbirth, breastfeeding)

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Portals of entry for HIV

Broken skin and mucous membranes

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Is HIV a primary or opportunistic pathogen?

Primary

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What is ART?

Antiretroviral therapy using multiple drugs that block different replication steps

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What does ART do to viral load?

Reduces it to zero (undetectable), but does not cure infection

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What is PEP?

Post-exposure prophylaxis taken within 72 hours of exposure

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What is PrEP?

Pre-exposure prophylaxis for people at ongoing risk

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Name the four major HIV drug classes

Fusion inhibitors, reverse transcriptase inhibitors, integrase inhibitors, protease inhibitors

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How do fusion inhibitors work?

Block gp41 from mediating membrane fusion

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How do reverse transcriptase inhibitors work?

Prevent formation of the provirus

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How do integrase inhibitors work?

Prevent insertion of proviral DNA into host chromosome

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How do protease inhibitors work?

Block maturation of new HIV virions