DNA & RNA Viral Genomes — “Clothes, Codes & Exceptions”
Think of viruses as tiny delivery riders. Their code (DNA/RNA) is the message, their coat (envelope/capsid) is the jacket, and their tricks decide how fast they spread and how we stop them.
Why am I learning this (off-hand answers)?
- To predict stability & transmission (naked vs enveloped) → cleaning, IPC, outbreaks.
- To recall high-yield exceptions that examiners love (Parvo is ssDNA, Reo is dsRNA, Pox replicates in cytoplasm).
- To know which purified genomes are infectious (matters for lab work, vaccines, and gene therapy).
DNA Viral Genomes — “The Old-School Libraries”
- HHAPPPPy viruses: Hepadna, Herpes, Adeno, Pox, Parvo, Papilloma, Polyoma.
- Exceptions you must chant:
- Parvo = ssDNA (“parvus = small” → only one strand).
- Pox = replicates in the cytoplasm and carries its own DNA-dependent RNA polymerase (so it breaks the “nuclear” rule).
- Papilloma, Polyoma, Hepadna = circular genomes (others are linear).
Analogy: DNA viruses are like classic libraries with many pages bound together (dsDNA). Parvo is a single loose sheet; Pox is a bookmobile that prints outside the library (cytoplasm).
RNA Viral Genomes — “The Pop Songs”
- +ssRNA (acts like mRNA): Retro (diploid, uses RT), Toga, Flavi, Corona, Hepe, Calici, Picorna.
Mnemonic story: “I went to a retro toga party, drank flavored corona, and ate hepe-calici-picnic snacks.”
- −ssRNA (must bring RNA-dependent RNA polymerase): Arenavirus, Bunyavirus, Orthomyxovirus, Paramyxovirus, Filovirus, Rhabdovirus.
Analogy: +RNA is a ready-to-sing lyric sheet; −RNA is a tune written backwards — needs a special reader (polymerase) to make sense.
Naked Viral Genome Infectivity — “Can the Letter Alone Start the Show?”
- Yes: purified dsDNA genomes (except Pox & HBV) and purified +ssRNA genomes (they behave as mRNA) are infectious.
- No: purified −ssRNA and dsRNA genomes are not infectious — they require the viral polymerases from inside a full virion.
Analogy: Some letters (genomes) can launch a concert alone; others need the whole band with instruments (polymerases) to play.
Viral Envelopes — “Jackets & Laundry Rules”
- Most enveloped viruses steal their lipid coat from the plasma membrane when they exit.
- Exception: Herpesviruses bud from the nuclear membrane.
- Naked (non-enveloped) viruses = tougher in the environment.
DNA naked = PAPP → Papilloma, Adeno, Parvo, Polyoma
RNA naked = CPR + Hepe → Calici, Picorna, Reo + Hepe
Hook: “Give PAPP smears and CPR to a naked hippie (Hepe).” - Soap & alcohol destroy envelopes → great for hygiene; naked viruses survive drying/acids better.
DNA Virus Characteristics — One-Breath Recital
All DNA viruses are HHAPPPPy, double-stranded, linear, icosahedral, and replicate in the nucleus — except Parvo (single), Papilloma/Polyoma/Hepadna (circular), and Pox (complex shape, cytoplasmic replication).
Case Scenario (Exam-style)
Stem: During a refugee-camp outbreak, non-bloody vomiting/diarrhea sweeps through after a day of shared food. Virus survives on surfaces and is resistant to standard hand sanitizer. What kind of virus is likely?
Answer: Naked, +ssRNA virus such as Calicivirus (Norovirus) — tough without envelope; needs soap/bleach and strict hand-washing.
Domino Web — Connect & Cement
- Envelope status → IPC rules → soap vs sanitizer → survival on surfaces.
- Genome sense (±) → need for polymerase → antivirals targeting polymerases.
- Segmented RNA (Ortho/Bunya/Arena/Reo) → reassortment → pandemics (link to Antigenic Shift scroll).
- Pox replicates in cytoplasm → carries its own enzymes → vaccine design history (vaccinia).
- Hepadna partially dsDNA + RT → link to reverse transcriptase and HBV drugs.
Jargon Demystified (tiny dictionary)
dsDNA/ssDNA
double/single DNA strands.
+ssRNA / −ssRNA
plus = acts like mRNA; minus = needs polymerase to copy into + strand.
Enveloped/Naked
with/without lipid coat. Coats are fragile; naked is hardy.
Icosahedral/Helical
20-sided jewel vs spiral shell.
Practice Buttons (tap & test yourself)
🧪 Naked DNA Check
🧪 dsRNA Pop Quiz
🧪 Pox Exception
🧪 Infectivity Drill
Spiritual Lesson
Hidden codes shape outcomes. A tiny strand can change a life or a city. Guard your “inner code” — your thoughts and habits. Let truth and love be your envelope. “In Him all things hold together.” (Colossians 1:17) — Jesus, the Eternal Scientist of Bodyland, keeps our designs from chaos.
✝️ “In Him all things hold together.” – Colossians 1:17
This scroll honors the One who authored every base pair and every antibody — Jesus Christ, the Eternal Scientist of Bodyland.
