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Virus/Bacteria Quiz
Virus/Bacteria Quiz

... a. Viruses can only be seen with an electron microscope. b. Viruses cannot make their own nutrients. c. Viruses do not contain genetic material. d. Viruses are not made up of cells. 10. Which of these is characteristic of both viruses and bacteria? a. They get their energy from their environment. b. ...
Lesson Plan BISP Characterisation Clothes
Lesson Plan BISP Characterisation Clothes

... Very small so can spread in all sorts of ways: airborne, contaminated food or water, vectors (mosquitoes) or infected animal bite, sexual contact, contaminated blood products. How do we defend ourselves against viruses? (ask them to explain each picture) Take precautions not to catch the virus, drug ...
Virus - District 128 Moodle
Virus - District 128 Moodle

...  Sexual contact  Herpes, AIDS ...
Bacteria and Viruses Notes
Bacteria and Viruses Notes

... The outbreak was spread throughout the UK _______________industry by feeding leftover bovine _____________-and-bone meal to young calves. On March 13, 2006, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) announced the confirmation of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) in a cow in____________________ ...
Chapter 1 ppt
Chapter 1 ppt

... •Consist of DNA or RNA and may contain protein for replication and pathogenesis; components are then enclosed in a protein coat with or without a lipid membrane coat. •Parasites- requiring host cell to replicate •The cells they infect and the host response to the infectious dictate the nature of the ...
Chapter-8 Viruses - Sakshieducation.com
Chapter-8 Viruses - Sakshieducation.com

... In 1892 for the first time, the Russian pathologist Dmitri Iwanowski, while studying tobacco mosaic disease, filtered the sap from the diseased tobacco leaves with filters that can retain bacteria. The infectious agents passed through the filters. The filtered sap when injected into healthy plants s ...
how hiv infects cells
how hiv infects cells

... In general, viruses have very small genomes. This means they can encode a very limited number of their own proteins. For this reason, most viruses must use the proteins provided by their host in order to reproduce (make more viruses). In a way, viruses act like parasites. They bring very little with ...
Cheng Zhang`s Muslim Medic Microbiology
Cheng Zhang`s Muslim Medic Microbiology

... Influenza • -ve sense ssRNA enveloped • Antigenic drift (AA mutations) and shift (e.g. zoonosis e.g. human + avian co-infection) ...
Paracytology and virology 2nd stage Germs: Viruses, Bacteria, and
Paracytology and virology 2nd stage Germs: Viruses, Bacteria, and

... Small infectious agents that cause diseases of plants. Viroids are agents that do not fit the definition of classic viruses. They are nucleic acid molecules (MW 70,000– 120,000) without a protein coat. Plant viroids are single-stranded, covalently closed circular RNA molecules consisting of about 36 ...
In general, viruses have very small genomes which means they can
In general, viruses have very small genomes which means they can

... capsule dark green. The most important part of the virus is its genome, which is two strands of RNA. Color the viral RNA (c) pink. On the picture, there are several instances of the viral RNA, make sure they are all colored pink. Also important to the virus are the enzymes that will convert the RNA ...
Chez Microbe New Orleans Style
Chez Microbe New Orleans Style

... ...
TAKS Review - Bowie Academic Chemistry Resources
TAKS Review - Bowie Academic Chemistry Resources

... when an infected person coughs or sneezes. This virus is transmitted in a manner most similar to the transmission of ...
Spring 2015-Chapter 14
Spring 2015-Chapter 14

... that the medicine no longer worked also saw significant improvements after surgery. Looking at the brains of five patients after they died from non-Parkinson’s related illnesses, the scientists found that the transplanted cells stayed healthy. Earlier research led scientists to hypothesize that the ...
Viruses and Prions (Chapter 13) Lecture Materials for Amy Warenda
Viruses and Prions (Chapter 13) Lecture Materials for Amy Warenda

... used for attachment to the host cell 3. Envelope (not all viruses) -some viruses have an envelope around the capsid consisting of lipids, proteins and carbohydrates (cell membrane like) -with envelope = enveloped virus -if a virus does not have an envelope it is called a non-enveloped virus -the env ...
virus
virus

... • E. coli and its viruses are called model systems because of their frequent use by researchers in studies that reveal broad biological principles • Beyond their value as model systems, viruses and bacteria have unique genetic mechanisms that are interesting in their own right ...
ebola virus - Advanced Decon Technologies
ebola virus - Advanced Decon Technologies

... Ebola   virus  (EBOV)   is   the   virus   responsible   for  Ebola  virus   disease,   a   type   of  hemorrhagic   fever,   a  highly  contagious  and  very  severe  infectious  disease  that  affects  both  animals  and  humans.   The ...
Microbiology, 9e (Tortora) Chapter 13 Microbiology, 9e (Tortora
Microbiology, 9e (Tortora) Chapter 13 Microbiology, 9e (Tortora

... 12) Continuous cell lines differ from primary cell lines in that A) Viruses can be grown in continuous cell lines. B) Continuous cell lines always have to be reisolated from animal tissues. C) Continuous cell lines are derived from primary cell lines. D) Continuous cell lines can be maintained throu ...
Document
Document

...  20 million people have died from AIDS and about 3 million are infected with HIV  Disease mechanism • Virus infects and replicated inside white blood cells (WBC) • WBC die  decreased immune response ...
- ISpatula
- ISpatula

... A,B,&C belong to the same family, since they are completely different and they differ in their genetic material, and differ in being enveloped or naked  Poliovirus : enterovirus: ‫مسبب شلل األطفال‬: ...
HOW HIV INFECTS CELLS
HOW HIV INFECTS CELLS

... little with them and steal what they need from the host cell. Because they cannot reproduce on their own, viruses are not considered living organisms, they are simply genetic information, either DNA or RNA packaged within a protein coat. The Structure of HIV The HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) ha ...
Chapter 18.notebook
Chapter 18.notebook

... • Commonly cause disease and decay • Reproduce by binary fission ­ asexual cell  ...
how hiv infects cells - hrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca
how hiv infects cells - hrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca

... membranes of the cell (f) which should be colored black. At this point, the virus and the cell membrane fuse and the virion core enters the cell. The core contains the viral genes. Step 2 - The viral RNA and core proteins are released into the cytoplasm where reverse transcriptase converts the viral ...
Immunology Stack
Immunology Stack

... The incubation period for HBV is very long. Hence, an early inoculation can prevent HBV infection from establishing even if the neonate is infected during parturition. ...
Microorganisms: Viruses
Microorganisms: Viruses

... 2. Viruses invade and reproduce inside living, or host cells and then destroy the host cells in which they replicate. ...
- AAP Red Book - American Academy of Pediatrics
- AAP Red Book - American Academy of Pediatrics

... Red Book® 2015, 2015 ...
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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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