Hijacks the cellular machinery and enters a lytic or lysogenic lifecycle.
Once the virus is inside the cell it's either is lytic or lysogenic. If the virus is lysogenic then it eventually turns to lytic and destroys the cell releasing a lot of baby viruses.
no
RNA or DNA depending on the type of virus.
A virus has proteins on its capsid that bind to living host cell. Once the virus has attached it enters the cell or inserts DNA/RNA into the cell.
protein
Hidden viruses, I believe.
If a virus enters a bacteria cell, the virus will try to infiltrate the cell's central code. If the cell catches it in time, it may be stopped (like a disease virus), but many times the bacterial virus will reproduce inside the cell. Hidden virus will become part of the cell's genetic material code upon entering, and will eventually reproduce. Active virus are easier to spot, as they try to start reproducing after "laying eggs" getting inside the cell.
The virus enters the host cell in the penetration phase.
The cell becomes a virus breeding machine the virus takes over the cell and uses it to make more viruses
Once the virus enters the cell, unless it is deformed in some way, it will have success.
RNA or DNA depending on the type of virus.
A Latent Virus
A virus has proteins on its capsid that bind to living host cell. Once the virus has attached it enters the cell or inserts DNA/RNA into the cell.
its genetic material
protein
ex. a virus enters a cell, replicates, and then "lyses" (ruptures) the cell. those virus particles are now free to infect other cells.
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.
when a virus enters a cell and is active, it cause the host cell to make new viruses, which destroy the host cell.
Latent Virus