Yes
l they just make a third one and so on.
Yes, viruses need to enter a host cell in order to reproduce. They do this by binding to receptors on the cell surface and then tricking the cell into letting them inside. Once inside, the virus hijacks the cell's machinery to make copies of itself.
Single-Celled Organisms use binary fission to reproduce.
Nothing reproduces inside a virus. It has to latch on the a host cell and insert its' DNA or RNA and then make the host cell reproduce virus particles.
A galvanished cell is a cell that can reproduce and a alkalised cell is a cell that can't reproduce
viruses are dormant when they are not inside a living cell. that means they don't have living characteristics when outside a living cell. they only reproduce when they are inside a living cell.
Reproduce is accented on the third syllable.
The phase of the cell cycle when the cell is preparing to reproduce is the S phase, where DNA replication occurs. This phase is followed by the G2 phase, where the cell continues to grow and prepares for cell division.
Somatic cells, which make up the majority of cells in the human body, reproduce through mitosis. Mitosis is a type of cell division that results in two daughter cells, each with the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
A Virus must invade a host cell in order to reproduce. What people commonly mix up with them is bacteria which has no need to
One-celled protists typically reproduce asexually through methods such as binary fission, where the cell divides into two identical daughter cells, or through budding, where a smaller cell forms and eventually detaches from the parent cell.
A virus needs a host cell to reproduce, so it enters a host cell(living cell e.g bacteria) and releases genatic materials which enslave the the cell and reproduce.