Viral Structure

13
Viral Structure A Brief Look at the Structure of Viruses Mr. Chapman Biology 20

description

A Brief Look at the Structure of Viruses Mr. Chapman Biology 20. Viral Structure. Viruses are Very Small. Viruses are much smaller than plant and animal cells, and also much smaller than bacterial. Viruses range in size from 18 – 300 nm. Note that 1 nanometre = 1 x 10 -9 m. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Viral Structure

Page 1: Viral Structure

Viral Structure

A Brief Look at the Structure of VirusesMr. ChapmanBiology 20

Page 2: Viral Structure

Viruses are Very Small

Viruses are much smaller than plant and animal cells, and also much smaller than bacterial.

Viruses range in size from 18 – 300 nm. Note that 1 nanometre = 1 x 10-9 m.

Page 3: Viral Structure
Page 4: Viral Structure

Viruses Have a Very Simple Structure

A virus is simply made of genetic material (either RNA or DNA) surrounded by a protein shell called a capsid.

Page 5: Viral Structure

Properties and Structure A single viral particle is called a virion.

Capsids (the protein structure on the outside of the virus) are different shapes for different viruses, and some are covered by a lipid (a.k.a. Fat) envelope.

The lipid envelope is the protective outer coat of a virus, from which spiky structures from proteins or sugars sometimes stick out.

Page 6: Viral Structure

Structure Continued...

A virus is called a naked virus when it consists of only the genetic material surrounded by a capsid (no lipid envelope).

Page 7: Viral Structure

Viral Structure

In some viruses, capsids form a 20-sided polyhedron.

Other viruses are rod-like, and some strand-like viruses are shaped in coils, like a spring or a helix.

Unlike prokaryotes and eukaryotes, viruses have DNA or RNA, but never both.

Page 8: Viral Structure
Page 9: Viral Structure

Importance of Structure / Shape The structure and shape of particular viruses

are very important.

A virus can only infect certain hosts, and it identifies its hosts by fitting its surface proteins to receptor molecules on the surface of the host cell.

The system is like a lock and key, and viruses need the correct key to infect a particular cell.

Page 10: Viral Structure

Is a Virus Alive?Believe it or not, the answer is not clear.

Page 11: Viral Structure

Viral Structure – Not Much Structure at All

Unlike other types of cells, a virus really has no structure to maintain at all.

Viruses don’t eat, excrete, use energy, or require oxygen at all. They don’t have organelles, either In fact, they do almost nothing that living organisms do – except reproduce.

Even so, a virus can only reproduce after it has infected a host cell.

Page 12: Viral Structure

Comprehension Questions

What are the three main components of a typical virus? Which one of these components is a naked virus missing?

How does the size of a virus compare to that of a plant or animal cell?

Why are the structures protruding from the lipid envelope important for bonding to host cells?

Why is it unclear as to whether or not a virus is alive?

Page 13: Viral Structure

Conclusion... For Now!Complete the rest of the class by reading section 18.2 of the Biology textbook, and complete questions 1 – 4 on page 551.