MCB 2000 Lecture Notes - Lecture 5: Intracellular Parasite, Viral Envelope, Cell Nucleus

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Virus means poison; someone once called them "a piece of bad news wrapped in a protein;" Obligate intracellular parasites (can reproduce/replicate only inside a host cell) Not cells; debate over whether or not they are considered alive (see below) Consist of nucleic acids (dna or rna) in a protein coat, called a capsid (no cell membrane) All cellular organisms can be attacked by viruses; however, viruses are very specific for the organisms & cells they infect. Characteristics of living things: reproduction, metabolism, organized as cells, contain all organic molecules (lipids, enzymes, nucleic acids, carbs), evolution & adaptation to changing environments. Viruses have some of these char"s: they can evolve, they contain some macromolecules, they direct their own reproduction; however, they are not cells - they do not have cytoplasm, a cell membrane, organelles, ribosomes, or a nucleus. They have dna or rna, unlike prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells, which have both.

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