The capsid. Made of protein, and sometimes various types of proteins.
virus
The Nucleolus of the Nucleus in any eukaryotic cell contains the hereditary material. While, prokaryotic cells hereditary material is located within the cell membrane floating freely in the cytoplasm.
No. Viruses are tiny living organisms. Heredity concerns genetics, which is very different.
DNA (Deoxyribose nucleic acid) and it is surrounded by (held in position by) histone proteins forming octamers.
With the exception of bacteria cells, hereditary material is held in the cell's nucleus.
Latent Viruses: some viruses can be latent. That means that after the virus enters a cell, its hereditary material can become part of the cell's hereditary material.
First the virus enters the host cell, then the virus' hereditary material come, then the host cells hereditary material becomes viral, then the host cell expands, and then it POPS!!!
virus
virus
Virus :)
virus
The Nucleolus of the Nucleus in any eukaryotic cell contains the hereditary material. While, prokaryotic cells hereditary material is located within the cell membrane floating freely in the cytoplasm.
Enclosing normal hereditary material in a virus and allowing it to move into cells to replace defective hereditary material in the treatment of genetic disorder is a form of gene therapy. A cell in which a virus multiplies itself in a host.
No. Viruses are tiny living organisms. Heredity concerns genetics, which is very different.
A Virus
A Virus They have a protein coat to encase them
virus~