Download Viruses Living or Not

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Orthohantavirus wikipedia , lookup

Henipavirus wikipedia , lookup

Hepatitis B wikipedia , lookup

Influenza A virus wikipedia , lookup

Potato virus Y wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Viruses
Living or Not
???????
Characteristics of Viruses


Among the smallest
biological particles
that are capable of
causing diseases in
living organisms
Constructed of
compounds
associated with cells
Not Considered Living



A virus is not a
bacteria, fungus,
protist, plant or
animal.
They can not carry out
cellular functions.
A virus can not
replicate without
infecting cells and then
using the organelles
and enzymes of the
cells of the host.
A Virus Has Two Essential Features

A Nucleic Acid
 DNA
or
 RNA
 But

not both
A Capsid – a
protein coat
surrounding the
nucleic acid.

Some may have a
membrane like
structure outside
the capsid called an
envelop

Examples:
Influenza
 Chickenpox
 Herpes-simplex
 HIV

Viral Shape


The shape of the virus
is determined by either
its capsid or its nucleic
acid
Two examples of shape
Icosahedron has 20
trianglular faces -- herpes
simplex, chicken pox and
polio
 Helix is a spiral shape
( like DNA) -- rabies,
measles and tobacco

There are Two Types of Viruses

DNA
 Replicated in one of two ways
 Directly
produce RNA that make new
viral proteins
 Join with the host cell’s DNA to produce
new viral proteins
 RNA
 Viral
RNA is released into the host cell’s
cytoplasm and uses the ribosomes to
produce new viral proteins
 Some are known as retroviruses
containing an enzyme called reverse
transcriptase. These use the RNA as a
template to make DNA. This DNA is
integrated into the host cell’s DNA.
Viroid




Smallest known particles able to replicate
Short single strand of RNA
No capsid
Disrupts plant metabolism and may damage an
entire crop
Prions
Abnormal forms of proteins that clump
in cells
 Linked to diseases of the brain
 Consist of 250 amino acids and not
associated with any nucleic acid
 Examples:

 Scrapies
in sheep
 Mad Cow Disease in cattle
What is Mad Cow Disease



Mad cow disease, or bovine spongiform
encephalopathy (BSE), is a fatal brain
disorder that occurs in cattle and is caused by
some unknown agent.
Brain cells die leaving the brain of the cow to
look like a sponge.
It is believed to have come from a similar
disease in sheep called scrapie.
Viral Replication