SmartBook #5: Viruses, Virioids
____________ is the viral process of attaching to the host cell receptor for the virus.
Adsorption
Answer Mode Multiple Choice QuestionYour Answer correct In which way do enveloped viruses leave their host cell?
Budding
Which are the three main criteria used in classifying viruses into families?
Chemical composition Genetic makeup Structure
Identify all the methods that a virus can use to gain entry into an animal cell.
Fusion of the viral envelope and the cell membrane Engulfment/phagocytosis of the virus
___________ infections are those which cells are infected yet show no cytopathic effects.
Persistent or Latent
Which factor enables certain laboratory animals to propagate viruses more readily than others?
Receptor specificity between virus and particular animal hosts
Which is NOT a reason that eggs provide an excellent in vivo viral cultivation system?
The egg contains a tissue monolayer
During the ____________ step in the viral multiplication cycle, capsids and genetic material are packaged into virions. Please give the specific term for this step. Listen to the complete question
assemby/maturation
Identify the different environments in which some viruses can replicate.
bacterial, human, animal cells
Which of the following viral release methods will not initially destroy the cell?
budding
Two ways in which newly assembled viruses are released from host cells are through __________ (exocytosis) by enveloped viruses, and through ___________ (rupture) by naked viruses.
budding, lysis
Which is closest in physical proximity to the nucleic acid of a virus?
capsid
Which structure immediately encloses viral nucleic acid?
capsid
A(n) ___________ is a protein subunit that forms the viral capsid.
capsomere
Which of the following is the monomeric unit for a viral capsid?
capsomere
Viruses ______ depend on a host cell for replication.
completely
Fill in the blank question. The 2 principle processes by which viruses penetrate host cells are _________ (engulfment) and direct fusion.
endocytosis
Which term is used to describe the phospholipid bilayer found surrounding the capsid of some viruses?
envelope
A(n) __________ virus has a membranous layer external to the nucleocapsid.
enveloped
Budding is a type of ______ process where enveloped viruses are released from the host cell membrane.
exocytic
Budding is a type of ______ process where enveloped viruses are released from the host cell membrane. Multiple choice question.
exocytic
The membrane receptors that viruses attach to during adsorption are typically composed of ______.
glycoproteins
What are the viral spikes typically composed of?
glycoproteins
Viruses which have a series of rod-shaped capsomer proteins linked together forming a series of interconnected hollow discs are termed ______.
helical
Two shapes of viral capsids are _______ , which resembles a bracelet; or _______________ , which is a type of polyhedron.
helical, icosohedral
The ___________ range defines the limitations of the type of cell that a virus can invade.
host
Which of the following is a term used to describe the different host cells which a virus can infect?
host range
Different viruses can infect which of the following?
human, bacterial, or plant cells
___________ bodies are masses of viruses or damaged organelles of a cell due to a cytopathic effect of viral infection.
inclusion
Hepatitis viruses have a tropism for cells of the ______
liver
The term ____________ is used to describe how some viruses burst cells during the release stage of viral multiplication. Listen to the complete question
lysis
Identify all the components of the nucleocapsid.
nucleic acid and capsid
The ____________ refers to the capsid and nucleic acid of a nonenveloped virus.
nucleocapsid
Viruses that are _________ lead to cancer in infected hosts.
oncogenic
Which of the following best describe the relationship between viruses and their host cell?
parasitism
Virus" is Latin for ______.
poison
Bacteriophages can infect which of the following?
prokaryotes only
At minimum, viruses are composed of nucleic acid covered by a coating compromised of
protein
Which macromolecule composes capsomeres?
proteins
A _______________ is the stage of an animal virus life cycle which is integrated into the host cell's genome.
provirus
Which of the following viral structures typically make enveloped viruses very species-specific for the host cell they infect?
receptors
When it comes to virus multiplication, viral exocytosis refers to ______.
release
HIV is described as a(n) ___________ because it synthesizes DNA from RNA using reverse transcription.
retrovirus
What are viruses called which are capable of converting their RNA genomes into DNA?
retroviruses
An enzyme capable of taking an RNA genome and generating a DNA copy is called ______.
reverse transcriptase
Fill in the blank question. In some viruses, including HIV, the enzyme _____________ ________________transcribes RNA into DNA.
reverse transcriptase
When it comes to virus multiplication, viral exocytosis refers to ______.
syncitia
A ____________ occurs when a virus induces multiple cells to fuse making a large multinucleated cell.
synctia
Which of the following is a multinucleated mass of cells due to the cytopathic effect of viral infection?
syncytium
A virus that only infects cells of a specific tissue in the body is described as having a ______. Multiple choice question.
tropism
The process of __________ occurs when viruses lose their envelope during penetration into a host cell or when the envelope/capsid is are dissolved within a vacuole.
uncoating
Which term describes the process of a virus losing its capsid and exposing viral nucleic acids to the immediate environment?
uncoating
A fully formed virus that is able to establish an infection in a host cell is often called a ______.
virion
A single virus particle is known as a(n)
virion
Identify the smallest pathogenic agent.
virion
Louis Pasteur proposed the term ______, Latin for "poison", to denote a special group of infectious agents. Multiple choice question.
virus
The term "in _____________ " implies that a virus is being propagated in a living animal.
vivo