BIOC17H3 Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: Influenzavirus C, Influenza A Virus, World War I

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Slide 1: midterm covers to the end of this lecture7/3/2014brunt 20141slide 2. 7/3/20142lecture 4:topic 3cellular and acellular microbes:the virusesvocabulary: bacteriophage, enveloped, naked, capsid, nucleocaspids, reverse transcriptase, budding, coated pit, adsorption, sars, influenza, hiv, west nilerelated reading: chapter 8 and chapter 13. , brunt 2014slide 3. 7/3/20143steps of infection via virusescan lead to mutations: cancerbrunt 2014slide 4. These are possible routes for the cell after they are affected by the virus. Remember the virus does not effect all cells, they are host specific and restricted into kingdoms. They can even be tissue or cell type specific, or more broader. The attachement of the virus to the host cell with proteins on its surface, it recognizes and attaches to these proteins with the spikes on their capsid, or the envelope. The epitomes are unique on the cell surface. 7/3/20144types of infections and their effects on host cellsbrunt 2014slide 5.

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