Cells and their membrane-the lock and key

  • Thread starter Thread starter TheSkyKing
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Cells Lock
AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the mechanisms of cell membranes and how viruses, particularly HIV, interact with them. A notable case is presented of a man with HIV who never developed AIDS due to a lack of specific protein channels in his cells, preventing the virus from injecting its genetic material. This raises questions about how larger molecules are transported across the cell membrane without these integral proteins, suggesting processes like exocytosis and endocytosis may play a role. The conversation also touches on the nature of HIV as a retrovirus that targets T-lymphocytes, leading to immune system compromise when a critical level of T-cells is affected. Overall, the case highlights the complexity of viral infections and cellular mechanisms.
TheSkyKing
Messages
23
Reaction score
0
Cells and their membranes-the lock and key

So in biology we were discussing cell membranes and the effects and processes viruses impose on the cell. Take lytic infection for example-in basic terms attaching to the cell, using one of the cells protein channels in the phospholipid bilayer and injecting its genetic material thus using the cell as a factory to make copies. Well this one man, whose name I shall not mention mainly because I do not remember, had the HIV virus but never got AIDS. The reason being because the man had no protein channels in his cells. Therefore there was no way of getting the genetic material into the cell. Leave diffusion across the membrane out of the question since RNA and DNA are not selectively permeable to it. And more interesting is how he lived. How were larger molecules and such transported in and out of the cell without the integeral membrane proteins? Maybe proteins and larger molecules could be exported and imported through exo and endo cytosis but other than that I could not see how he lived. That, if anyone is willing to answer, is an answer I am still looking for.
 
Last edited:
Biology news on Phys.org
You're right, this is absurd. I'm not familiar with specific HIV recognition sites or channels but perhaps the one targeted by it was sufficiently mutated in this person to block it. I am not sure how it would do that and not block whatever it was supposed to do though.
 
HIV is a retrovirus that hijacks your immune system's cellular machinery. On the HIV viron are specific glycoproteins that bind to receptor proteins (eg. CD4 receptor) on T-lymphocytes. After the binding of the glycoprotein and receptor occures, penetration occurs and the HIV loads all of its cellular contents into the T-cell (viral RNA, reverse transcriptase, integrase). The reverse transcriptase starts to make a cDNA template from the viral RNA, and integrase integrates the viral DNA into the DNA of the T-cell. The infected T-cell that reproduces its DNA as if nothing happened, hence replicating viral DNA. After transcription we get more viral RNA and they pinch off the T-cell as new virons and start to affect other cells.

AIDS develops when the HIV virons affect a critical level of T-cells in your body, compromising your immune system and causing it to collapse. The man who didn't get AIDS from HIV could have a mutated receptor on his T-cells, or not have a receptor at all (latter not likely). The man could still have normal transportation of stuff in and out of his cells, but HIV could not affect his immune system because of a faulty receptor.

K.
 
I've been reading a bunch of articles in this month's Scientific American on Alzheimer's and ran across this article in a web feed that I subscribe to. The SA articles that I've read so far have touched on issues with the blood-brain barrier but this appears to be a novel approach to the problem - fix the exit ramp and the brain clears out the plaques. https://www.sciencealert.com/new-alzheimers-treatment-clears-plaques-from-brains-of-mice-within-hours The original paper: Rapid amyloid-β...
https://www.discovermagazine.com/the-deadliest-spider-in-the-world-ends-lives-in-hours-but-its-venom-may-inspire-medical-miracles-48107 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Versutoxin#Mechanism_behind_Neurotoxic_Properties https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0028390817301557 (subscription or purchase requred) The structure of versutoxin (δ-atracotoxin-Hv1) provides insights into the binding of site 3 neurotoxins to the voltage-gated sodium channel...

Similar threads

Replies
11
Views
2K
Replies
15
Views
3K
Replies
1
Views
21K
Replies
1
Views
12K
Back
Top