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Viruses

Viruses. 1.“Virus” is the Latin word for poison. 2. All viruses have one thing in common: They enter living cells and, once inside, use the machinery

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Page 1: Viruses. 1.“Virus” is the Latin word for poison. 2. All viruses have one thing in common: They enter living cells and, once inside, use the machinery

Viruses

Page 2: Viruses. 1.“Virus” is the Latin word for poison. 2. All viruses have one thing in common: They enter living cells and, once inside, use the machinery

1. “Virus” is the Latin word for

poison.

2. All viruses have one thing in common: They

enter living cells and, once inside, use the machinery of

the infected cell to produce

more viruses.

Page 3: Viruses. 1.“Virus” is the Latin word for poison. 2. All viruses have one thing in common: They enter living cells and, once inside, use the machinery

3. A typical virus is composed of a core

of DNA or RNA surrounded by a

protein coat.

4. A virus’s protein coat is called a

capsid.

5. The capsid enables a virus to enter a host cell.

Page 4: Viruses. 1.“Virus” is the Latin word for poison. 2. All viruses have one thing in common: They enter living cells and, once inside, use the machinery

6. Once the viral genes get inside a cell, the genes are

expressed.

7. This genetic program causes the

host cell to make copies of the virus.

8. In the process, the host cell is

destroyed.

Page 5: Viruses. 1.“Virus” is the Latin word for poison. 2. All viruses have one thing in common: They enter living cells and, once inside, use the machinery

9. Most viruses are highly specific to the cells they infect because plant viruses infect plant cells; animal viruses infect only certain related species of

animals; and bacterial viruses infect only certain types of bacteria.

10. Viruses that infect bacteria are called bacteriophages.

Page 6: Viruses. 1.“Virus” is the Latin word for poison. 2. All viruses have one thing in common: They enter living cells and, once inside, use the machinery

11. Once a virus is inside the host cell, two processes may occur: the lytic cycle or the lysogenic cycle.

Page 7: Viruses. 1.“Virus” is the Latin word for poison. 2. All viruses have one thing in common: They enter living cells and, once inside, use the machinery

12. In a lytic infection, a virus enters a cell, makes copies of itself, and causes the cell to

burst.13. Because the host cell is lysed and

destroyed, this process is called a lytic infection.

Page 8: Viruses. 1.“Virus” is the Latin word for poison. 2. All viruses have one thing in common: They enter living cells and, once inside, use the machinery

14. A lytic virus is like an outlaw in the American Old West because:

• The outlaw eliminates the town’s existing authority – (host cell’s DNA)

• The outlaw demands to be outfitted with new weapons, horses, and equipment by terrorizing the local people – (using the host cell to make viral proteins and DNA)

• The outlaw forms a gang to leave town to attack new communities – (the host cell bursts, releasing hundreds of new viruses)

Page 9: Viruses. 1.“Virus” is the Latin word for poison. 2. All viruses have one thing in common: They enter living cells and, once inside, use the machinery

15. In a lysogenic infection, a virus integrates its DNA into the DNA of the host cell, and the

viral genetic information replicates along with the host cell’s DNA.

Page 10: Viruses. 1.“Virus” is the Latin word for poison. 2. All viruses have one thing in common: They enter living cells and, once inside, use the machinery

16.

Page 11: Viruses. 1.“Virus” is the Latin word for poison. 2. All viruses have one thing in common: They enter living cells and, once inside, use the machinery

17. Retroviruses are viruses that contain

RNA as their genetic information.

18. Retroviruses get their name from the

fact that their genetic information is copied backward, from RNA to DNA.

19. AIDS is the most infamous retrovirus.

Page 12: Viruses. 1.“Virus” is the Latin word for poison. 2. All viruses have one thing in common: They enter living cells and, once inside, use the machinery

20. Viruses rely upon a host to grow and

reproduce which means they are parasites.

21. Viruses are not alive although they can

reproduce and posses DNA because they do

not: 1) grow and develop

2) obtain and use energy

3) respond to the environment

Page 13: Viruses. 1.“Virus” is the Latin word for poison. 2. All viruses have one thing in common: They enter living cells and, once inside, use the machinery

22. No. Most viruses are not harmful to humans.

23. A pathogen is a disease-causing agent.

24. Viruses cause disease by disrupting the body’s normal equilibrium.

25. Viruses attack and destroy certain cells in the body, causing the symptoms of the

disease.

Page 14: Viruses. 1.“Virus” is the Latin word for poison. 2. All viruses have one thing in common: They enter living cells and, once inside, use the machinery

26. No. Viral diseases cannot be treated with

antibiotics.

27. The best way to protect against most viral diseases lies in prevention, often by the use of vaccines.

28. Most vaccines provide protection only if they are used before an infection begins.

Page 15: Viruses. 1.“Virus” is the Latin word for poison. 2. All viruses have one thing in common: They enter living cells and, once inside, use the machinery

29.