virus
Pages which contain `virus':
- module not yet titled
- RNA viruses and how they contradict the central dogma
- Basic Virus Structure
- Basic Virus Structure
- Basic Virus Structure
- Viruses are, by far, the smallest organisms in the world. Viruses are
- DNA or RNA . A number of viruses contain their genetic information in RNA
- instead of DNA). Viruses survive and reproduce by infecting a cell and
- commandeering the cellular synthetic machinery to make more viruses. Then
- the viruses lyse the cell and start the cycle over again.
- There is an entire class of viruses known as bacteriophages that prey
- exclusively on bacteria. Many of these viruses have a common structure.
- HIV, the virus that causes the disease AIDS and is the most famous virus in
- This is an image of rhinovirus 14, one of the many
- rhinoviruses.
- What you are seeing are the interlocking proteins of the virus capsid. Each
- virus structures are available: Follow this link to view
- an example virus structure.
- Immunology Encyclopedia
- lymphocytotropic virus, called
- Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV).
- immune system that recognize and directly eliminate virus-infected
- virus, the agent of AIDS. (Contrast with
- lymphocytotropic virus
- virus
- Cell Biology Chapter
- Basic virus structure
- Phage Replication
- Polymerase Chain Reaction - Xeroxing DNA
- whether from humans, bacteria, or viruses, cannot copy a chain of DNA
- Cell Basics
- viruses are only alive while infecting a cell.
- Lwoff's Pathways - Viral Replication
- Virus is from the Latin word for "poison." The term remains an apt
- one since viruses constitute one of the greatest threats to human
- health. One group of viruses, Herpes simplex (HSV), is the most
- HSV illustrates an interesting property of certain viruses - it can
- take both active and latent forms. During the active phase, the virus
- During the latent phase, it's as if the virus has gone to sleep.
- replication patterns. Some viruses can only replicate by what is
- forcing it to make new viruses. At some point bursting at the seams
- with the viruses, the host breaks open, releasing new pathogens into
- the environment. Other viruses operate differently: they enter and
- host cell and using it to make viruses, the injected DNA can become
- The lysogenic pathway was discovered in bacterial viruses
- to leak out. The cell dies rapidly, releasing virus particles.
- host cell is not killed outright, but is occupied by the virus and used
- Monoclonal Antibody Technology
- Substances foreign to the body, such as disease-causing bacteria and viruses
- A vaccine is a preparation of killed or weakened bacteria or viruses that, when
- Examples of Viral Replication Pathways
- to leak out. The cell dies rapidly, releasing virus particles.
- host cell is not killed outright, but is occupied by the virus and used