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Viruses. Chapter 24. Virus. A nonliving particle made up of nucleic acid and a protein coat or nucleic acid and a lipid-protein coat. Scientists began studying viruses in the late 1800’s after they found that a factor smaller than a bacteria could cause disease. Characteristics of Viruses.
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Viruses Chapter 24
Virus • A nonliving particle made up of nucleic acid and a protein coat or nucleic acid and a lipid-protein coat. • Scientists began studying viruses in the late 1800’s after they found that a factor smaller than a bacteria could cause disease.
Characteristics of Viruses • Do NOT have cytoplasm or organelles • Cannot carry out cellular function such as metabolism and homeostasis • Cannot reproduce outside their host cell
Characteristics of Virusescontinued • Obligate intracellular parasites
Characteristics of Virusescontinued • Capsid – a protein coat is the only layer surrounding some viruses • Some viruses have a bilipid membrane called an envelope that surrounds the capsid http://www.odec.ca/projects/2004/lija4j0/public_html/img/virus.jpg
Characteristics of Virusescontinued • Viruses can be classified by whether they have RNA or DNA, single or double stranded, linear or circular, and based on the nature of their capsid and on the presence or absence of an envelope. • Viruses need to recognize a host cell before they can infect it
Lytic Cycle • During this cycle a virus invades a host cell, produces new viruses, and ruptures (lyses) the host cell when releasing newly formed viruses. • Viruses that reproduce only by the lytic cycle are called virulent.
Lytic Cycle • 1. Virus attaches to the host cell and injects its DNA • 2. The viral DNA circularizes(organizes) • 3. Viral DNA takes control of the cell • 4. New viruses are made • 5. The cell lyses, releasing more viruses
Lysogenic Cycle • Allows viruses to hide in their host cell for days, months, or years. • A virus whose replication includes the lysogenic cycle is called a temperate virus
Lysogenic Cycle • 1. Will exit the Lytic cycle. • 2. Viral DNA will become part of the host cell DNA. • 3. Host cell will make copies of itself • 4. Will then re-enter the lytic cycle when it becomes activated
Origin of Viruses • Most scientists reason that viruses evolved from early cells. https://www.jyu.fi/bioenv/en/divisions/smb/virus/astrovirology/alkukuvia.jpg
Viral Diseases Section 24.2
Vector • an intermediate host that transfers a pathogen or parasite to another organisms. Include: humans, animals, mosquitoes, ticks, and fleas
HIV and AIDS • HIV(human immunodeficiency virus) causes AIDS (acquired immune deficiency syndrome) • Destroys the immune system www.vircolab.com
Vaccine • A solution that contains a harmless version of a virus, bacterium, or toxin that causes an immune response.