they must find a host cell in the infected body and take it over to force it to replicate
Viruses do not have their own metabolism and cannot produce energy on their own. They rely on host cells to provide nutrients for their replication.
They rely on their host. They can not reproduce on their own, so they are not considered living. They inject genetic information into a host cell and make the cell produce more viruses.
Viruses are different from eukaryotic cells in structure and replication. Viruses are smaller and simpler, consisting of genetic material surrounded by a protein coat. They cannot replicate on their own and rely on host cells to reproduce. Eukaryotic cells, on the other hand, are larger and more complex, with a nucleus and organelles. They can replicate independently through mitosis or meiosis.
Viruses lack the cellular machinery necessary to regulate internal conditions, like temperature or pH, which is essential for homeostasis. They rely on host cells to provide the resources needed for replication and survival, making them dependent on the host's environment for maintaining stability.
Viruses exhibit the characteristics described. They are not considered living organisms because they cannot carry out metabolic activities on their own and rely on host cells to replicate and multiply.
Viruses do not have their own metabolism and cannot produce energy on their own. They rely on host cells to provide nutrients for their replication.
No, viruses do not have their own endoplasmic reticulum. They rely on host cells to carry out their replication and do not possess the cellular machinery needed to produce their own endoplasmic reticulum.
They rely on their host. They can not reproduce on their own, so they are not considered living. They inject genetic information into a host cell and make the cell produce more viruses.
The main difference is that viruses rely on a host cell's machinery to replicate their genetic material, while cells have their own machinery to replicate their DNA. Viruses insert their genetic material into a host cell and hijack its replication machinery, whereas cells replicate their DNA through processes like DNA polymerase and cellular organelles.
Viruses are different from eukaryotic cells in structure and replication. Viruses are smaller and simpler, consisting of genetic material surrounded by a protein coat. They cannot replicate on their own and rely on host cells to reproduce. Eukaryotic cells, on the other hand, are larger and more complex, with a nucleus and organelles. They can replicate independently through mitosis or meiosis.
viruses are non cellular , they have no sexual or asexual reproduction they reproduce by replication
Viruses do not have the machinery to produce their own carbohydrates. Instead, they rely on the host cells they infect to supply the necessary carbohydrates for their replication and survival. Viruses can hijack the host cell's metabolic pathways to obtain carbohydrates for their own use.
host cell (and its machinery for protein synthesis, and it's enzymes for the metabolic processes required)
Viruses lack the cellular machinery necessary to regulate internal conditions, like temperature or pH, which is essential for homeostasis. They rely on host cells to provide the resources needed for replication and survival, making them dependent on the host's environment for maintaining stability.
temperate viruses
Viral replication is the process of creating viruses. This can only occur once a virus has infected a cell - because viruses cannot replicate by themselves (they need to use a host cell).
No HIV, like all viruses lacks the machinery for self replication. Viruses instead must infect a host cell and hijack the cell to make more viruses. In the case of HIV, it must infect a living human cell in order to copy itself.