The polymerase chain reaction machine (often known as the PCR machine) can create an indefinite amount of copies of DNA samples.
the answer is chromotids
39. When a virus attaches to a cell, it injects the cell with its DNA or RNA. This genetic coding material then implants itself into (or destroys) the DNA of the host cell. The viral genetic coding then induces mitosis, and the cell reproduces, and continues to make copies, until the immune response system of the organism reacts. Generally, viruses 'reproduce' by injecting the viral DNA into a host cell using the host cell's DNA synthesis enzymes to duplicate the viral DNA and the proteins that comprise the viral protein coat (capsid).
I believe it is called the Ly-tic cycle. The virus attaches itself to a cell and injects DNA. The viral DNA enters the Lytic cycle and new viruses are made. The cell then breaks open and viruses are released. I believe AIDS is such a virus.
Mitosis
DNA makes copies of itself
HIV binds with the CD4 protein on the surface of the T4 lymphocyte. The HIV fuses with the T4 lymphocyte. Viral RNA (ribonucleic acid) and reverse transcriptase enter the target cell. Reverse transcriptase produces viral DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) from the viral RNA. Viral DNA enters the target cell's nucleus and splices into the target cell's DNA. The target cell uses the information on the viral DNA and produces the pieces needed for building copies of HIV. The pieces are assembled into new copies of HIV. This process uses an enzyme called protease. Copies of HIV are released from the target cell in a process called budding.
No. Viral DNA is going to code only for viral DNA. Viral RNA will code for viral RNA.
True.When a cells size increases,it can't transfer enough nutrients throughout the cell if the cell size is big.So it makes copies of its DNA
The DNA makes copies of its self.
The polymerase chain reaction machine (often known as the PCR machine) can create an indefinite amount of copies of DNA samples.
The polymerase chain reaction machine (often known as the PCR machine) can create an indefinite amount of copies of DNA samples.
A virus is a small strand of DNA or RNA that copies itself.
the answer is chromotids
39. When a virus attaches to a cell, it injects the cell with its DNA or RNA. This genetic coding material then implants itself into (or destroys) the DNA of the host cell. The viral genetic coding then induces mitosis, and the cell reproduces, and continues to make copies, until the immune response system of the organism reacts. Generally, viruses 'reproduce' by injecting the viral DNA into a host cell using the host cell's DNA synthesis enzymes to duplicate the viral DNA and the proteins that comprise the viral protein coat (capsid).
Before meiosis begins, the cell copies its DNA in the process of DNA replication.
Replication! 1) DNA splits 2) DNA copies 3) left with 2 copies of DNA! :)