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!!!
transduction
A virus grows and develops within a host organism by attaching to host cells, entering them, and using the host's cellular machinery to replicate itself. This process can lead to the virus spreading throughout the host's body and causing infection.
The process of entrance and growth of a microorganism or virus in the host is called infection. Infection occurs when the pathogen gains access to the host's tissues, replicates or multiplies within the host, and causes disease symptoms.
pathogen/host
The Lytic Cycle.
lytic cycle
A virus attaches to a host cell by recognizing and binding to specific proteins or receptors on the cell surface. This attachment is necessary for the virus to enter the host cell and begin the process of infection.
endocytosis. The envelope of the virus fuses with the host cell membrane, releasing the viral genetic material into the cell. This process allows the virus to hijack the cellular machinery to replicate and spread.
It steals it from its host. A virus enters the cells of the host animal and changes the cell's DNA/RNA to make it stop doing what it usually does for the host and start working on making copies of the virus using the host's resources and energy. A virus is not a living thing, so it must have a living thing work for it to make replications in a "reproductive" process. The reproductive process of the influenza viruses is the Lytic Cycle. See more about that in the related questions.
In computer security terminology, a virus is a piece of program code that, like a biological virus, makes copies of itself and spreads by attaching itself to a host, often damaging the host in the process. A pattern is a virus that would happen over and over.
The lytic cycle is a process that viruses use to replicate within a host cell. It is not a characteristic of bacteria.
The end plate in a virus helps in recognizing and binding to specific host cell receptors, allowing the virus to infect the host cell. It also aids in the release of the viral genetic material into the host cell during the infection process.