Viruses are particles of nucleic acid, protein, and in some cases, lipids.
the main parts of a virus are the Phino- which is the main structure to make the virus live. next, is the Ceno. the ceno makes the virus eat away at your healthy cells. hope this helped :)
Viruses are composed of two main parts: an outer protein covering called a capsid and an inside core of either DNA or RNA.
1) Nucleic acid genome.
2) Protein capsid.
3) Protein tail in phage virus.
4) Envelope in complex viruses.
the DNA and the envelope or caspid
Protein capsid and nucleic acid.
Every virus consist of a capsid and genetic material.
The main parts of the body are the head, arms, legs, ganja, torso, and organs.
The components of a virus that is injected into the infected cell is either the RNA or DNA. A virus is composed of two parts a nucleic acid part and a protein part.
The 3 parts of an plant cell are... The cell membrane, the cytoplasm and the nucleus.
There are actually five stages of a virus. They are attachment, entry, synthesis, assembly, and release.
The two main parts of a virus are Protein Coat and Nucleic Acid. The protein coat completely surrounds the nucleic acid and serves as a protective coating and aids in attachment of the the virus to the host cell. The nucleic acid can be either Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA) or Ribonucleic Acid (RNA).
There are 4 main parts. The 'Dee', the 'Fib', the 'Brill' and the 'Ator' - moron!
All viruses have 2 basic parts: a protein coat that protects the virus and an inner core made of genetic material.
There are actually seven main parts: The Retina The Cornea The Lens The Pupil The Iris The Optic Nerve The Conjunctiva
the four main parts of the earth is biosphere,geosphere,hydrosphere,atmosphere
the four main parts of the flower are the petals, sepals, stamen, and the pistil!?
The 4 main parts of the water cycle are:evaporation , condensation, precipitation,collection. These parts form basis of water cycle.
AQ,LET,ISI and DAUD
sea, desert, land and life.
the roots the bud the petal and the stem.
core the crust the gases and its orbit
cardiopulmonary recissitation