Gonorrhea is not a virus, but a bacteria. It's a diplococcus.
causes Disease
During the cycle of viral shedding, the virus has made copies of itself and the host cell is no longer useful. The host cell then dies, and the new virus cells then must find a new host.
After the viral multiplication cycle in the lytic cycle, the host cell dies. The host cell does not 'die' in the lysogenic cycle.
lysogenic cycle is the answer .... because the lytic cycle does destroy the host cell of the virus?
Many viruses enter the lytic cycle immediately following infecting the host cell. However, some viruses may not lyse their host immediately and enter the lysogenic cycle. At the start of the lysogenic cycle, the virus genome is integrated into the host chromosome instead of being immediately transcribed and translated. The virus genome then lies dormant in the host chromosome until a later event triggers its excision from the host chromosome. The excised viral genome will then be transcribed and translated and the virus enters the lytic cycle. the virus hides in the host's DNA.
Lysogenic !
Lysogenic.
lytic
Unlike lytic viruses, lysogenic viruses do NOT lyse the host cell right away where as lytic cells do.
The pox virus is related to the herpes viruses and they are lytic but can become latent. Latency is not the same as lysogenic.
causes Disease
Hijacks the cellular machinery and enters a lytic or lysogenic lifecycle.
The Norwalk virus (Norovirus) does not have a lyosgenic cycle. It does not remain dormant as lysogenic viruses can. It is lytic and is considered virulent as many lytic viruses are. Most bacteriophages are lysogenic. See link below:
lytic it goes through the lytic cycle
Yes rabies is lytic. The lytic cycle is a cycle of viral reproduction and is how some diseases are spread.
The virus that causes AIDS, HIV, is lytic in nature. Once it attaches itself into a host cell, it will go about integrating its genetic material into the host cell and use its machinery to force the cell to make copies of the virus. Additionally, the viral cell will kill the host cell in the process.
Yes, herpes virus could be refered to as a lysogenic virus. However, the virus could also be a lytic virus as well. Depends on the type. HSV 1 or HSV 2 or HSV 6.Herpes is lysogeniclysogenic