PLOX!
There are five strains of ebola virus. The Zaire ebola virus in 1976, Sudan ebola virus in 1976, Reston ebola virus in 1989, Cote d'Ivoire virus in 1994, Bundibugyo ebola virus discovered in the year 2007.
It is a virus. Ebola is a RNA virus.
The proteins in the capsid allow the virus to attach to the "docking stations" proteins of the host cell.
The proteins in the capsid allow the virus to attach to the "docking stations" proteins of the host cell.
It is a virus. Ebola is a RNA virus.
No. Ebola is a virus. No virus is a fungus and no fungus is a virus.
Ebola is a virus disease.
They help the virus attach to the host cell.
The width of an ebola virus is about 100 nanometers.
A virus attaches to a specific cell because it has proteins on its surface that can only bind to receptors on that specific cell. This binding is necessary for the virus to enter the cell and replicate. This specificity is determined by the structure of the virus and the receptors on the cell surface.
Ebola is a virus, and as such, it is not part of any of the kingdoms of life.
Ebola is NOT a eukaryote. Ebola is NOT a prokaryote. Ebola IS a VIRUS. ALL Viruses are NOT considered either prokaryotes or eukaryotes because they lack the characteristics of living things - (except the ability to replicate and to do that they have to hijack another living cell).