The life cycle of a typical DNA virus consists of 7 steps. The steps are entry, uncoating, early transcription, viral DNA replication, late transcription, viral assembly, and the virus exits.
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.
If it consists only of these two components it is a virus.
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.
Lytic cycle
a typical virus has a core of DNA or RNA and a protein coat
A virus
The lysogenic cycle is a cycle inside virus
Lytic Cycle
Stress can make a virus worse than it currently is, and can even activate a dormant virus. A virus that is hiding and not doing anything is considered to be in what scientists call the lysogenic cycle. Stress can cause a virus in the lysogenic cycle to advance to the lytic cycle, which is the state at which the virus advances and actually takes effect.
causes Disease
it does it like any other virus
Some viruses have a lytic cycle or a lysogenic cycle. The difference in these two cycles is that the cell dies at the end of the lytic cycle or the cell remains in the lysogenic cycle. The virus remains "hidden".
A virus is a relatively long molecule, not a cell.
DNA or RNA
mexicans
The two phases of virus activity are the lytic cycle and the lysogenic cycle. In the lytic cycle, the virus infects the host cell, replicates its genetic material, and then leads to the destruction of the host cell, releasing new virus particles. In the lysogenic cycle, the virus integrates its genetic material into the host cell's DNA and remains dormant for a period of time before switching to the lytic cycle.