Placing a normal gene into a virus is a type of gene therapy. The virus is used as a vector in the hopes of inserting the normal gene into the recipient's DNA.
Smallpox was a virus.
A virus is sometimes called a bug as a metaphor to describe a programming error or flaw in the system. Just like a bug in the natural world, a virus can disrupt normal functioning and cause problems. This term has been used in the tech industry for a long time and has become common slang.
If it consists only of these two components it is a virus.
The first computer virus, written in 1981, was called the Elk Cloner. It infected Apple II computers through infected floppy disks and displayed a short poem to the user.
i am not sure who but he was in a college and he invented a virus called ellic Coner which was put into a game
Its genetherapy.IM SMART!
gene therapy
In this for Mr. Cha's 7th grade science. Improve and say Here if you are too. Anyways the answer is Multiple Alleles.
Polio is a word that can mean one of two things, the virus or the disease The Polio disease which you are referring to is called poliomyelitis. The organism that causes it is a viral organism (virus). The name of the virus that causes poliomyelitis (polio disease) is called Poliovirus. The virus is a normal RNA virus from the Picornaviridae and genus enterovirus family.
yes
Evolution is the change in allele frequency over time in a population of organisms. Viruses do have DNA and RNA, so the can change allele frequency over time and have a form of gene pool, though they are not organisms in the general sense of " living organisms. " Loosely, one can say that a virus evolves.
It is completely normal.
A trojan virus is worse than a normal virus and is more likely to crash your computer
It is called a virus because we have an illness called a "virus" and when a computer GETS a virus, they're not working right and are not running well.
A virus that infects and causes harm to its host is called a pathogenic virus. These viruses can lead to various diseases by disrupting normal cellular functions, triggering immune responses, or causing cell death. Examples include the influenza virus, HIV, and the Ebola virus. Pathogenic viruses can vary in severity, with some causing mild symptoms while others can be life-threatening.
yes
yes