Viruses make copies of themselves by hijacking host cells and using the cell's machinery to replicate their genetic material. The virus enters the host cell, releases its genetic material, and tricks the cell into making viral proteins and new viral particles. These new viral particles then go on to infect other cells and continue the cycle of replication.
Instructions for making new copies of a virus are found in the virus's genetic material, which contains the information needed for replication. This genetic material can be RNA or DNA, depending on the type of virus. The virus uses host cells to replicate and make new copies of itself, often causing harm to the host in the process.
a virus is able to replicate itself bu taking over the metabolic activities of the cell it infects essentially saying stop what you are suppose to do and make copies of me. so the virus actually doesn't replicate itself but rather the cell in which it infects does it for it. this occurs during the lytic phase of the virus. sometimes the virus "hides" by incorporating itself within the dna of the cell it infects(causing certain cancers) until it is releases itself and says make me. this dormant phase is called lysogenic.
A virus is a small infectious agent that replicates only inside the living cells of other organisms. It can cause a variety of diseases in humans, animals, and plants by hijacking the host cell's machinery to make copies of itself.
The RNA virus hijacks the host cell's machinery to replicate itself, utilizing the host cell's DNA as a template to produce viral RNA copies. This process often leads to the disruption of normal cellular functions, causing disease symptoms in the host organism.
When a virus takes over a cell's machinery, it hijacks the cell's resources to replicate itself. The virus uses the cell's machinery to produce more copies of the virus, eventually leading to cell damage or death. This process can contribute to the spread of the virus throughout the body.
Since viruses are nonliving they have to invade and hijack a living cells DNA to make more copies of itself. If it cannot do this it cannot make more copies of itself.
more copies of itself
A virus carries out the function of replication, by hijacking the host cell's machinery to make copies of itself.
Instructions for making new copies of a virus are found in the virus's genetic material, which contains the information needed for replication. This genetic material can be RNA or DNA, depending on the type of virus. The virus uses host cells to replicate and make new copies of itself, often causing harm to the host in the process.
It's a virus which copies itself into new files every time a file containing it is opened.
A virus is a small strand of DNA or RNA that copies itself.
a virus is able to replicate itself bu taking over the metabolic activities of the cell it infects essentially saying stop what you are suppose to do and make copies of me. so the virus actually doesn't replicate itself but rather the cell in which it infects does it for it. this occurs during the lytic phase of the virus. sometimes the virus "hides" by incorporating itself within the dna of the cell it infects(causing certain cancers) until it is releases itself and says make me. this dormant phase is called lysogenic.
Because of its multiple patterns of copies of itself
meosis
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 Lysogenic Cycle. The virus' DNA will integrate itself into the host cell's own DNA, such that the cell will continue to make copies of the virus for as long as it survives (and if it passes down its DNA to daughter cells).
the virus is integrate inti the DNA of the host cell and is latent.