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20
Viruses
20.1
Virus Structure and Life Cycle
A complete virus (virion) is essentially a piece of packaged genetic material (the
provirus). The protein packaging (called envelope or capsid) around the DNA or
RNA protects its integrity; this packaging is in turn usually encapsulated in a protein
coat, which is able to bind to specific target hosts.
A virus first attaches to its host, penetrates inside the cell, and removes its coat to
release its genetic material (RNA or DNA). The encoded genes are expressed (using
the machinery of the host) and replicated. Copies of the viruses are then assembled
from the expressed genes, and released, usually by lysis of the host cell, which
kills it, and the cycle begins again. 4 Hence, this is called the lytic pathway. Some
viruses can alternately select the lysogenic or dormant pathway, whereby the virus is
incorporated into the host’s genome. In this case it is only replicated when the host
cell divides. The switching mechanism between the lytic and lysogenic pathways
provides a good example of a regulatory network. 5
Mathematical modelling has been especially valuable for gaining insight into
how a viral infection spreads within a host because many details are not directly
experimentally accessible. 6
20.2
Viruses as Pathogens
Many viruses are pathogenic to human beings, some extremely so. An effective way
of modelling the spread of viral diseases (and indeed any infectious disease) is the
susceptible–infected–recovered model illustrated in Fig. 20.1. It is described by three
differential equations:
ds
dt = −βsi
(20.1)
di
dt = βsi − ρi
(20.2)
dr
dt = ρi
(20.3)
where ss is the fraction of susceptible people in a total population upper NN, ii the fraction
of infected people, and rr the fraction of recovered people, with
s plus i plus r equals 1 periods + i + r = 1 .
(20.4)
4 See, e.g., Ryu (2017) for elaboration of many details.
5 Vohradsky (2001), Vohradsky (2017), Shao et al. (2019).
6 Graw and Perelson (2016).