Chapter 5: Viruses and Prions
A single virus particle could contain a genome consisting of ______.
RNA only or DNA only
Viruses CANNOT ______.
Synthesize proteins and replicate outside of a cell
Lysogeny
The condition in which the bacterial host chromosome carries bacteriophage DNA
Release
The final step in the multiplication cycle of viruses in which the assembled virus particle exits the host cell and moves on to infect another cell.
Host range
The limited range of host cells that each type of virus can infect and parasitize.
Uncoating
The process of removal of the viral coat and release of the viral genome by its newly invaded host cell.
Induction
The process whereby a bacteriophage in the prophage state is activated, begins replication, and enters the lytic cycle.
Endocytosis
The process whereby solid and liquid materials are taken into the cell through membrane invagination and engulfment into a vesicle.
Capsid
The protein covering of a virus's nucleic acid core
Assembly (viral)
The step in viral multiplication in which capsids and genetic material are packaged into virions.
viruses represent the smallest infectious agents
True
Which facts best support the position that viruses are not living organisms?
Viruses do not have any means of independent metabolism and cannot reproduce on their own
Lysogeny is best described as ______.
integration of the viral genome into the host chromosome
Most RNA viruses will assemble the virion within the host cell's _______.
cytoplasm
Budding is the release of ______ viruses.
enveloped
A virus with a rod-shaped capsomer has a(n) ________ capsid, while a virus with a capsid arranged as a multifaceted polygon has a(n) _________ capsid.
helical; icosahedron
Since the hepatitis B virus can only infect liver cells in humans and not in other animals, its _________ is considered to be highly restrictive.
host range
Viruses which have symmetrical 20-sided capsids are called ____.
icosahedron
A bacterium acquires a new trait from its temperate phage through a process called _________.
lysogenic conversion
Most DNA viruses will assemble their virions within the host cell's _______.
nucleus
Some animal viruses are called ______ because they enter a host cell and permanently alter its genetic material, leading to cancer.
oncogenic
At minimum, all viruses are composed of ______.
proteins and nucleic acids
The process of a virus losing its capsid (and envelope, if it has one) and exposing viral nucleic acids to the immediate environment.
uncoating
Adsorption
A process of adhering one molecule onto the surface of another molecule.
General phases in the life cycle of animal viruses
Adsorption Penetration Uncoating Synthesis Assembly Release
Prophage
Bacteriophage DNA that is embedded in the bacterial host's DNA
Which is closest in physical proximity to the nucleic acid of a virus?
Capsid
Capsomers
Capsids exhibit symmetry due to the regular arrangement of these subunits. Are monomers of capsid
Identify all the methods that a virus can use to gain entry into an animal cell.
Engulfment/phagocytosis of the virus and fusion of the viral envelope and the cell membrane
The viral envelope and capsid are the same thing.
False
Prion
A group smaller and simpler than viruses that can cause serious disease than humans and animals. The diseases are progressive and universally fatal. Each have the deposition of distinct protein (without nucleic acid) fibrils in the brain tissue.
Icosahedron
A regular geometric figure having 20 surfaces that meet to form 12 corners. Some virions have capsids that resemble icosahedral crystals
bacteriophages (phages)
A virus that infects bacteria
Mature virus particles are constructed from nucleic acid and protein during the ______ phase of the viral life cycle. In viral multiplication, capsids and genetic material are packaged into virus particles during this step.
Assembly
Inclusion body
Is a mass of viruses or damaged organelles caused by viral infection of a cell
Syncytia (singular: syncytium)
Is the fusion of multiple damaged host cells into single large cells containing multiple nuclei
Synthesis (viral)
The step in viral multiplication in which viral genetic material and proteins are made through replication and transcription/translation.
Penetration (viral)
The step in viral multiplication in which virus enters the host cell.
Bacteriophages can increase the pathogenicity of their bacterial host.
True
Viruses are a unique group of biological entities known to infect every type of cellular, such as bacteria, algae, fungi, protozoa, plants, and animals.
True
The 2 principal processes by which viruses penetrate host cells are _________ (engulfment) and direct fusion.
endocytosis
Viruses have a compact and economical structure that is ______.
not cellular
During the lysogenic cycle, viral DNA enters an inactive ______ state, during which it is inserted into the bacterial chromosome. It is used to describe the phage DNA that is latently incorporated into the bacterial host genome.
prophage
All viruses have two parts: a ______ covering and ______ located in a central core.
protein; DNA or RNA
Chronic latent state
It remains hidden within body cells but periodically becomes reactivated.
Envelope
Many animal viruses also possess an additional covering external to the capsid
Persistent infections
When the cell harbors a virus and is not immediately lysed, can last from a few weeks to the remainder of the host's life
Provirus
When viral DNA is incorporated into the DNA of the host
Enveloped viruses are released from host cells through ______ (exocytosis), while naked viruses are released through ______ (rupture).
budding; lysis
At minimum, viruses are composed of nucleic acid and a ________ comprised of protein
capsid/shell
The uncoating step in a viral life cycle, where the genome is released from the capsid, is not required in a bacteriophage because ______.
the phage genome is directly injected into the cell cytoplasm
Which type of phage generally can increase the pathogenicity of a bacterium?
temperate phage
Which step in the life cycle of an animal virus is not needed in the life cycle of a bacteriophage?
uncoating