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10 Chapter 37 Reo Calici
10 Chapter 37 Reo Calici

... virus to other animals Difficult to propagate in cell culture systems Often requires infection of animals, then harvesting virus from ...
Viruses - The Fenn School
Viruses - The Fenn School

... Absorption : The virion releases its DNA or RNA into the host cell. Reproduction: The viral DNA or RNA is injected into the host’s nucleus, starting the reproductive process Viral Reproduction: The Cell produces all the parts needed for many new virions Assembly: The new parts are assembled into new ...
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Infectious Diseases
Infectious Diseases

... Diseases caused by a virus, bacterium, protist or fungus and are spread from an infected organism or the environment to another organism Biological Vector: disease carrying organism (rats, birds, dogs, cats, mosquitoes, fleas, flies) People can be carriers too! ...
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... A virus is a particle made of nucleic acid, protein, and, in some cases, lipids. A typical virus is composed of a core of DNA or RNA surrounded by a protein coat called a capsid. Viruses that infect bacteria are called bacteriophages. They enter living cells and, once inside, use the machinery of th ...
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Viruses and infectious agents

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... maximisation and defence. Results from the model support and quantify a theoretical prediction known as the `kill-thewinner' hypothesis (Thingstad et al, 1997), in which hosts that become abundant due to uptake efficiency become targets of viral attack. This negative density-dependent selection lead ...
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