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Viral Life Cycles & Replication. Key Terms: Virus Host cell  Viruses attack specific host cells.  They fit into specific surface receptors like a lock.

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Presentation on theme: "Viral Life Cycles & Replication. Key Terms: Virus Host cell  Viruses attack specific host cells.  They fit into specific surface receptors like a lock."— Presentation transcript:

1 Viral Life Cycles & Replication

2 Key Terms: Virus Host cell  Viruses attack specific host cells.  They fit into specific surface receptors like a lock and key.

3 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.

4 The Lytic Cycle 2. Entry—injection of viral DNA or RNA into host cell.

5 The Lytic Cycle 3. Replication—copying viral proteins and nucleic acids.

6 The Lytic Cycle 4. Assembly—production of many new bacteriophages.

7 The Lytic Cycle 5. Lysis and Release—host cells burst and releases bacteriophages.

8 The Lytic Cycle

9 Latent Viruses Examples: HIV Herpes  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

10 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:

11 Lysogenic Cycle 1. Attachment & Entry—phage nucleic acid is injected into the host cell.

12 Lysogenic Cycle 2. Prophage Formation—viral nucleic acid joins host cell DNA forming a provirus.

13 Lysogenic Cycle 3. Cell Division— bacteria cells replicate via binary fission producing many provirus cells.

14 Lytic and Lysogenic Cycles

15 Lytic & Lysogenic Cycles

16 Other Infectious Particles  Viroids are small, circular RNA molecules without a protein coat.  Viroids infect plants.  Examples of viroids: Potato Spindle Tuber Viroid

17 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.

18 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.


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