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Block B Towaki, Brian, Julio, Jeff Antigens and Antibodies
Block B Towaki, Brian, Julio, Jeff Antigens and Antibodies

... – Occurs through the same methods that antibodies work on antigens. ...
Form B
Form B

... The cell may lyse as it releases progeny virions. The cell may release virions without being lysed, leading to a persistent infection. The cell may grow and divide with the infecting virus, so daughter cells also contain the virus. The cell may be “transformed” into a tumor cell. Each of these possi ...
Taking a Closer Look at Kingdom Eubacteria, Archaea and (if we
Taking a Closer Look at Kingdom Eubacteria, Archaea and (if we

... Eubacteria (how are they similar and different) 2. How do bacteria reproduce? 3. How are bacteria classified? 4. How are bacteria harmful/helpful? 5. Why are viruses considered to be non-living? 6. Compare and contrast virus and bacteria reproduction. ...
Microbes
Microbes

... 7. Explain the lytic and lysogenic cycles in viruses. What happens in each? Lytic-virus invades cell, makes new viral parts using the host materials, assembly of new virus, release of virus often destroys host cell. Lysogenic- virus invades cell and becomes part of the host DNA. When host cell divid ...
Modules10-17to10-22
Modules10-17to10-22

... • Prophage genes inserted in the DNA of essentially harmless bacteria cause botulism, diptheria, and scarlet fever. This occurs when prophage genes become active in the host genome. Also, an environmental signal such as radiation or a certain chemical triggers a switchover from the lysogenic cycle t ...
Bacteria - Dickinson ISD
Bacteria - Dickinson ISD

... vitamins our bodies can’t make. ...
Viruses Archaebacteria
Viruses Archaebacteria

... sunlight like plants do. • Fungi include single-celled creatures that exist individually—the yeasts—and multicellular bunches, such as molds or mushrooms. • Many fungi form long filament-like, or thread-like, strands of cells called hyphae (high-fee). These hyphae are what give mold colonies their ...
microbe mission test
microbe mission test

... oxygen in the water, animals and plants may die off in large numbers. ...
محاضرة 8
محاضرة 8

... • Viruses are obligate intracellular parasites • Viruses cannot make energy or proteins independent of a host cell • Viral genome are RNA or DNA but not both. • Viruses have a naked capsid or envelope with attached proteins • Viruses do not have the genetic capability to multiply by division. • Viru ...
Virus - KICS Learns
Virus - KICS Learns

... Well then, what IS it? Now, is there a simple explanation which can define what a virus IS? Hmmmm... that's actually a tough question. A virus is not strictly alive.. nor is it strictly dead... A virus has some fundamental information (genes made of DNA or RNA) which allows it to make copies of its ...
An Inside Look at the Flu
An Inside Look at the Flu

... 10. Holly beat the Influenza B virus. Does this mean she can never get the flu again? Why? (2pts) ...
Feline Leukemia - The Silent Killer
Feline Leukemia - The Silent Killer

... What is the feline leukemia virus? The feline leukemia virus is a cancer-causing retrovirus, responsible for causing leukemia-like cancers and weakening a cat’s immune system. As a result of weakened immunity, cats become susceptible to a wide range of diseases. Is my cat at risk for this virus? All ...
antigen specific immunostimulation
antigen specific immunostimulation

... of people infected is estimated at ~200 million, of which 20 million have severe disease. †Current measles vaccines are effective but heatsensitive, which makes their use difficult in tropical countries. Estimated mortality data for 1999 from World Health Report 2000 (World Health Organization). ...
Lesson Plan: Viruses and Evolution
Lesson Plan: Viruses and Evolution

... 1. Introduce the topic of viruses and evolution by leading a class discussion. Remind students that viruses are pathogens, which are disease--­causing agents. Ask students, What are some other kinds of pathogens? Students should recall that some bacteria, protozoans, and fungi are pathogens. Ask, Wh ...
Diversity of Life Study Guide
Diversity of Life Study Guide

... List each of the 5 main groups of protist & give an example from each. Describe the level of organization seen within humans. Name the six different organ systems of humans that were covered in class. For each: outline the purpose of that system and name the essential organs. ...
Chapter 35 Hepatitis viruses
Chapter 35 Hepatitis viruses

... Some copies of the RNA transcript are reverse transcribed into ssDNA The ssDNA is transcribed into dsDNA ...
Bacteria, Protist, Fungi, and Viruses Lesson Overview In this lesson
Bacteria, Protist, Fungi, and Viruses Lesson Overview In this lesson

... o Students will complete the activity from the Discovery Channel School’s Curriculum Center: Who’s the source of the infection? (http://school.discoveryeducation.com/curriculumcenter/viruses/pdf/activity2.pdf) o The teacher will assign students to Jigsaw groups for further study. 1. Bacteria round 2 ...
VBAC vs. repeat C
VBAC vs. repeat C

... • A pap smear can be used as an effective test for HPV in women • virus typing is done when an abnormal pap is detected to determine which of the 40 types of HPV is present • HPV-16, HPV-18, HPV-31, HPV-35, HPV39, HPV-45, HPV-51, HPV-52, and HPV58 are the “high risk” or precancerous ...
File - Mr. Swords` Classes
File - Mr. Swords` Classes

... host cells which may cause abnormal growth, leading to tumors ...
Bacteria and Virus test review
Bacteria and Virus test review

... 6. __________________________Blue green, photosynthetic bacteria 7. __________________________Any microorganism that can cause disease 8. __________________________Poison produced by some bacteria 9. __________________________The most common group of bacteria 10.__________________________A medicine ...
“All the World`s a Phage” The Role of Bacterial Viruses in
“All the World`s a Phage” The Role of Bacterial Viruses in

... found associated with bacteria in all environmental niches. Marine ecologists believe that bacteriophages kill between 5% and 40% of marine prokaryotes daily by viral lysis, which gives them a key role in planetary carbon cycling. Bacteriophages provide one of the major mechanisms for horizontal gen ...
Structure of Bacteria
Structure of Bacteria

... - take in organic molecules from CO2 using energy from chemical reaction ...
General Virology I
General Virology I

... protected from the environment by the capsid. - Proteins associate into structural units (this is what one sees in the electron microscope or when start to disassociate a capsid), the structural units are known as capsomers - capsomers may contain one or several kinds of polypeptide chain. ...
Natural and Artificial Selection
Natural and Artificial Selection

... but not the cells in your body. Each different type of antibiotic affects different bacteria in different ways. For example, an antibiotic might stop a bacterium's ability to turn sugar into energy, or its ability to build its cell wall. When this happens, the bacterium dies instead of reproducing.” ...
Extremophiles - Cardinal Newman High School
Extremophiles - Cardinal Newman High School

... Dimitri Iwanowski (1892) – discovered the unseen, disease-causing agent in the filtrate of infected tobacco leaves was “filterable”. Martinus Beijerinck (1898) – coined the term “virus” (poison) and confirmed they are filterable. Wendell Stanley (1935) – isolated (with the advantage of the newly dev ...
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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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