lysosomes
A virus can enter a cell and integrate its genetic material into the cell's own DNA without destroying the cell or replicating itself. This integration can lead to long-term effects on the cell's behavior and potentially alter 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!!!
A retrovirus is a type of virus whose genetic material can be integrated into the host cell's DNA, making it become part of the cell's hereditary material. Examples include HIV and some types of leukemia-causing viruses.
It becomes duplicated.
The location where the DNA molecule becomes unzipped is called the replication fork. This is where the two strands of the double helix separate during DNA replication to allow for the synthesis of new complementary strands.
Phagocytes are destroying pathogens
Phagocytes are destroying pathogens
Phagocytes are destroying pathogens
The material is referred to as an electorchromic material.
a it becomes positively b it becomes negatively charge
A Latent Virus
A material that loses electrons becomes positively charged.