Retroviruses.
They are types of nucleic acids. DNA is found in the nucleus and RNA is found in the nucleolus (in the nucleus) and in the ribosomes. DNA codes for RNA, which codes for proteins which ultimately make up our body.
They inject their DNA which infuses with a cell's DNA and tells the cell to start creating more viruses.
Viruses can have either DNA or RNA (a virus will never have both at the same time, although some viruses can have each one separately at different stages of their life cycles). RNA viruses are much more common than DNA viruses.
The two kinds of genetic material that can be found in viruses is either going to be RNA or DNA either or you want find both in same virus, but what can happen is (Dogma - DNA to RNA they have an RNA to DNA step this usaully occurs in Retoviruses suh H.I.V..
Yes
They are types of nucleic acids. DNA is found in the nucleus and RNA is found in the nucleolus (in the nucleus) and in the ribosomes. DNA codes for RNA, which codes for proteins which ultimately make up our body.
It's encoded in either DNA or for many types of viruses, in RNA
That is called a retrovirus. The enzyme used to code in that direction is called reverse transcriptase.
Examples include: - Influenza - HIV - Hep C
DNA and RNA viruses.
viruses do replication with their DND
How the DNA arranged in bacteria-viruses and animals and why?
They inject their DNA which infuses with a cell's DNA and tells the cell to start creating more viruses.
Yes - but its not the part that codes for proteins, its the rest (the so-called junk DNA).
Blossom Damania has written: 'DNA tumor viruses' -- subject(s): Oncogenic DNA viruses, DNA Tumor Viruses, Tumor Virus Infections, Pathogenicity
yes, but many viruses do not have DNA genome, but RNA genome.
Viruses can have either DNA or RNA (a virus will never have both at the same time, although some viruses can have each one separately at different stages of their life cycles). RNA viruses are much more common than DNA viruses.