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Posting ID: 49913
Posting ID: 49913

... genome of the cells that it infects. But, infectious HIV particles carry their genome in RNA strands. Somehow, during infection, the virus needs to make a DNA copy of its RNA genome. This is very unusual, because all of the normal cellular machinery is designed to make RNA copies from DNA, but not t ...
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Module5: Other RNA viruses

... stands for “respiratory enteric orphan,” which was named because the first member was identified in the respiratory and the enteric tract of animals and humans and was not associated with any type of disease. They are generally spherical in shape and have icosahedral symmetry. They do not contain an ...
Virus Jeopardy Game
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... insert any bacterial gene into a new host b. In specialized transduction, both bacterial and phage DNA go into the new host c. In generalized transduction, only phage DNA is inserted into the new host d. Specialized transduction involves cutting out bacterial DNA and phage DNA from ANSWER a lysogen’ ...
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Chapter 12 DNA & RNA
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M13 genome
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... or AC1) of the begomoviruses and the curtoviruses. Curtoviruses are recombinants that acquired their C1/ Rep ORF from a begomovirus (Rybicki, 1994). Curtoviruses only match the GRD sequences when GenBank is searched with the nucleotide sequences (BLASTN) not the encoded amino acid sequences (BLASTX) ...
Molecular Evolutionary Analysis of Classical Swine Fever Virus
Molecular Evolutionary Analysis of Classical Swine Fever Virus

... 10-3 substitutions per site per year, respectively, which demonstrated that Group 2 evolved much faster than Group 1. The striking differences in evolutionary rates of two genotypes likely implied that both of them had their different evolutionary strategies. Key Words: Classical swine fever virus, ...
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DNA virus



A DNA virus is a virus that has DNA as its genetic material and replicates using a DNA-dependent DNA polymerase. The nucleic acid is usually double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) but may also be single-stranded DNA (ssDNA). DNA viruses belong to either Group I or Group II of the Baltimore classification system for viruses. Single-stranded DNA is usually expanded to double-stranded in infected cells. Although Group VII viruses such as hepatitis B contain a DNA genome, they are not considered DNA viruses according to the Baltimore classification, but rather reverse transcribing viruses because they replicate through an RNA intermediate. Notable diseases like smallpox, herpes, and chickenpox are caused by such DNA viruses.
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