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Virus and Bacteria Unit Study Guide
Virus and Bacteria Unit Study Guide

... The basic structure of all viruses. The overall process of viral replication (Attach to host, inject DNA). How vaccines provide you with immunity against pathogens. The major similarities/differences between viruses and bacteria. The major characteristics of the prokaryotic kingdoms and the domains ...
C. Fungi - Effingham County Schools
C. Fungi - Effingham County Schools

... B – Cell wall – Gives shape to the cell C – Pilus – Play a role during conjugation or help attach to host cells D. – Flagellum – Helps with movement E – DNA – Contains genetic material of bacterium cell ...
Prions
Prions

... • Readings question #5: what is the virus that is responsible for this disease? How is it spread? • Chickenpox and Shingles: – Shingles rarely occurs in people under the age of ...
Prions
Prions

... • Readings question #5: what is the virus that is responsible for this disease? How is it spread? • Chickenpox and Shingles: – Shingles rarely occurs in people under the age of ...
Virus PowerPoint
Virus PowerPoint

... ubiquitous and contagious. They can be spread when an infected person is producing and shedding the virus. Symptoms of herpes simplex virus infection include watery blisters in the skin or mucous membranes of the mouth, lips or genitals. Lesions heal with a scab characteristic of herpetic disease. H ...
VIRUS Notes
VIRUS Notes

... Big Idea: VIRUSES ARE NOT LIVING BECAUSE THEY DON’T FULFILL ALL THE CHARACTERISTICS OF LIVING THINGS. ...
Virology
Virology

... genome enters the cell is that the (-) sense genome is copied by the polymerase, forming either (+)sense transcripts which are used directly as mRNA, or a double-stranded molecule known either as the replicative intermediate (RI) or replicative form (RF), which serves as a template for further round ...
Cause of death File
Cause of death File

... Enter the cells of the organisms they infect (the host) and use host’s metabolic systems to make more viruses. The virus’s genetic material is replicated, then the protein coat synthesised. Newly formed virus particles are released by budding from the cell surface or lysis of the cell. ...
Name: Period ______ HOW HIV INFECTS CELLS In general
Name: Period ______ HOW HIV INFECTS CELLS In general

... virus are the enzymes that will convert the RNA to DNA - reverse transcriptase (e), an enzyme that is unique to viruses. Color the reverse transcriptase yellow. Because the HIV virus uses the reverse transcriptase and RNA method, it is known as a retrovirus. The Flu is another example of a retroviru ...
Virology
Virology

... nucleic acid (RNA or DNA )as their genomnome.  They are not cells and are too small to be seen in the light microscope.  They are basic life forms composed of a protein coat that surrounds genetic material, certain viruses are further enclosed by an external lipid bilayer membrane that surrounds t ...
Ch 23: Bacteria - Aurora City Schools
Ch 23: Bacteria - Aurora City Schools

... Replication • Viruses injects DNA/RNA, takes over the cell, makes the cell make more viruses, Kills cell when new viruses released infects more cells • 2 cycles: – Lytic: happens fast, virus kills cells, virulent phages – Lysogenic: happens slow…days, weeks, months, years. Virus “hides” in the cell ...
25 Viruses
25 Viruses

... host cell, and releases newly formed viruses 1) Viruses that undergo the lytic cycle are called virulent because they cause disease 2) The lytic cycle consists of five phases a. The bacteriophage first attaches to a susceptible bacterium by attaching its tail fibers to a receptor site (1) Receptor s ...
TGT- Questions
TGT- Questions

... 14. What are the two ways in which something can be sterilized? Heat or chemicals 15. What is one argument for why viruses are non-living? They cannot reproduce without a host 16. There are two basic structural features to a virus, what are they? A protein coat and a form of genetic information (DNA ...
Microorganisms Review Sheet
Microorganisms Review Sheet

... 17. What are the characteristics of protists? (nutrition, movement, how many cells, etc.) 18. How do we classify protists? Describe each one. 19. How do protists reproduce? 20. What are some diseases caused by protists? 21. List the different ways protista move. Describe each. 22. What is a pseudopo ...
Viruses and Bacteria
Viruses and Bacteria

... In your textbook, read about the diversity of prokaryotes and about the characteristics of bacteria. Answer the following questions. 1. What are three types of environments in which archaebacteria are found? _______________________ ...
Prokaryotes
Prokaryotes

... • Method of causing disease is very different from that of bacteria (…different treatment & prevention methods too) • Antibiotics will not work on viruses because they target specific enzymes not found in viruses or host cells • Some examples of viral diseases include: Influenza (RNA) Common cold(RN ...
viruses
viruses

... Because viruses are dependent on living things, it seems likely that viruses developed after living cells. The first viruses may have evolved from genetic material of living cells. Viruses have continued to evolve over billions of years. ...
Bacteria Wanted Poster Research Project
Bacteria Wanted Poster Research Project

... Dengue fever Ebola hemorrhagic fever Mononucleosis ...
Meet the Microbes - Science Prof Online
Meet the Microbes - Science Prof Online

... words underlined and appearing in blue are links that can be clicked on for more information. PowerPoints must be viewed in slide show mode to use the hyperlinks directly. • Several helpful links to fun and interactive learning tools are included throughout the PPT and on the Smart Links slide, near ...
الشريحة 1
الشريحة 1

... •An outbreak of Avian Influenza H5N1 occurred in Hong Kong in 1997 where 18 persons were infected of which 6 died. •The source of the virus was probably from infected chickens and the outbreak was eventually controlled by a mass slaughter of chickens in the territory. •However, the strains involved ...
Viral virulence genes
Viral virulence genes

... 1918  influenza  pandemic  lethal  for  very  young,  very   old,  and  unexpectedly  for  young  adults  18-­‐30  yr  old ...
Globalization of Infectious Diseases
Globalization of Infectious Diseases

... Hematophagous (vampire) bats are proliferating because of forest devastation in the state of Maranhao, northeastern Brazil. 20 cases of fatal rabies have been clinically documented. The population in the area is protecting their houses with wire nets to prevent bat bites. ...
Chapter 20
Chapter 20

... T cells and then destroys them • Upon destroying T cells, virus particles increase in number in the blood and infect more lymphocytes • It is this destruction of the body’s lymphocytes that blocks the body’s immune response and signals the onset of AIDS ...
Preventable Feline Diseases
Preventable Feline Diseases

... Rabies is a fatal viral disease that can affect all warm-blooded animals, including humans. Rabies is spread through bite wounds from the saliva of a rabid animal. Rabies is most often found in wildlife such as raccoons, skunks and bats, but can also be found in horses and cows as well as dogs and c ...
Instrumentation and Process Control
Instrumentation and Process Control

... 3) The third group has double-stranded RNA as its genetic material. Because the cell has no enzyme capable of transcribing this RNA into mRNA, the virus carries its own polymerase. Reovirus, the best-studied member of this group, has 10 segments of double-stranded RNA. 4) The fourth group, exemplif ...
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Virology

Virology is the study of viruses – submicroscopic, parasitic particles of genetic material contained in a protein coat – and virus-like agents. It focuses on the following aspects of viruses: their structure, classification and evolution, their ways to infect and exploit host cells for reproduction, their interaction with host organism physiology and immunity, the diseases they cause, the techniques to isolate and culture them, and their use in research and therapy. Virology is considered to be a subfield of microbiology or of medicine.
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