Viral Life Cycles & Replication
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Transcript of Viral Life Cycles & Replication
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Viral Life Cycles & Replication
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Key Terms:
Virus
Host cell
Viruses attack specific host cells.
They fit into specific surface receptors like a lock and key.
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The Lytic Cycle The Lytic Cycle is
responsible for viral reproduction.
The Lytic Cycle has five steps:
1. Attachment—the bacteriophage attaches to a specific host cell.
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The Lytic Cycle2. Entry—injection of viral DNA or RNA into host cell.
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The Lytic Cycle3. Replication—copying viral proteins and
nucleic acids.
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The Lytic Cycle4. Assembly—production of many new
bacteriophages.
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The Lytic Cycle5. Lysis and Release—host cells burst and
releases bacteriophages.
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The Lytic Cycle
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Latent Viruses
Examples:HIVHerpes
Some viruses have the ability to become dormant inside the cell
They are activated by external signals such as stress or illness.
Herpes
HIV
AIDS symptom: Kaposi's sarcoma
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Lysogenic Cycle Latent viruses “hide out”
in the Lysogenic Cycle until they receive a “signal” to attack.
There are three steps in the Lysogenic Cycle:
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Lysogenic Cycle1. Attachment
& Entry—phage nucleic acid is injected into the host cell.
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Lysogenic Cycle2. Prophage
Formation—viral nucleic acid joins host cell DNA forming a provirus.
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Lysogenic Cycle
3. Cell Division—bacteria cells replicate via binary fission producing many provirus cells.
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Lytic and Lysogenic Cycles
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Lytic & Lysogenic Cycles
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Other Infectious ParticlesViroids are small, circular RNA molecules without a protein coat.
Viroids infect plants.
Examples of viroids:Potato Spindle Tuber
Viroid
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Other Infectious Particles
Prions are infectious proteins. Normal proteins change into
prions when they come into contact with prion proteins.
Prions form insoluable deposits in the brain that cause neuron degeneration.
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Examples of Prions Mad Cow Disease
(BSE)
Kuru—a rare nerve disease in New Guinea that occurred because of a funeral practice of eating the brains of the dead.