It depends on the type of virus. Hope it helped! LOL
Infection of an animal cell by a virus typically involves the virus attaching to specific receptors on the cell surface, entering the cell through endocytosis or direct fusion, replicating using host cell machinery, and then releasing new viruses by budding or cell lysis. In contrast, infection of a bacterial cell by a virus (called a bacteriophage) usually involves the phage injecting its genetic material into the bacterium, hijacking the bacterial machinery to replicate, and then causing lysis of the bacterial cell to release new phages.
The YEAST cell is by far the biggest cell out of a BACTERIUM and a VIRUS.... I know this 'cos it was on my science homework and 'cos i found it on another website which gave me the urge to put it here since the question hadn't been answered....x
It is most likely to be the micro hpokilijuya but it could simply be the mashian ant both in norway.
Viruses are non-living entities that require a host cell to replicate, while animal and plant cells are living organisms that can function independently. Animal cells typically lack a cell wall and chloroplasts, which are present in plant cells. Additionally, plant cells have larger vacuoles and contain chlorophyll for photosynthesis, which animal cells do not have.
Both a living cell and a virus contain nucleic acid. The virus has a capsid, whereas a living cell does not.
virus
Infection of an animal cell by a virus typically involves the virus attaching to specific receptors on the cell surface, entering the cell through endocytosis or direct fusion, replicating using host cell machinery, and then releasing new viruses by budding or cell lysis. In contrast, infection of a bacterial cell by a virus (called a bacteriophage) usually involves the phage injecting its genetic material into the bacterium, hijacking the bacterial machinery to replicate, and then causing lysis of the bacterial cell to release new phages.
Major differences are- 1)most plant viruses are with plus sense s.sRNA although there are exeptions whereas animal viruses can be d.s/s.sDNA or RNA viruses..2)plant virus always needs insect vector,whereas animal virus may enter body through various means.3)plant virus always needs a mechanical damage in cell wall of plant to enter.
it reproduces
The YEAST cell is by far the biggest cell out of a BACTERIUM and a VIRUS.... I know this 'cos it was on my science homework and 'cos i found it on another website which gave me the urge to put it here since the question hadn't been answered....x
A virus does not have any organelle that is found in animal or plant cellVirus is surrounded by capsid, a protein shell, rather than cell membrane and cell wall.A virus is much smaller than an animal or a plant cell. It is even much smaller than a bacterial cell.Virus is not considered to be a cell, nor is it composed of cells.Rather than a nucleus, the nucleic acid of virus is housed in a protein shell, called capsid.Virus can only divide once inside a host cell, where it assembles clones of itself.Unlike animal or plants, viruses are not classified via binomial nomenclature.
No where. A virus is not a cell.
It is most likely to be the micro hpokilijuya but it could simply be the mashian ant both in norway.
The event that occurs in bacteriophage multiplication that does not occur in animal virus replication is the injection of only the viral nucleic acid into the host cell. Viruses that infect bacteria are specifically called bacteriophages.
What a cell and a virus have in common is the RNA or DNA. The virus can be either a RNA virus or a DNA virus.
The cell infected by a virus is referred to as the host cell. The virus hijacks the host cell's machinery to replicate and produce more virus particles.
animal jam is not a virus