This is exactly where the Phrase "hijacking the Cells own bio-Machinery" comes into focus.
No, viruses do not have ribosomes. Instead, they rely on the host cell's machinery to replicate and produce proteins. Viruses lack many of the cellular structures and organelles found in living organisms.
If viruses manage to deliver their RNA to the host's ribosomes, the ribosomes will begin translating the viral RNA into proteins. These viral proteins can include structural components necessary for new virus particles and enzymes that aid in viral replication. This process effectively hijacks the host's cellular machinery, allowing the virus to replicate and propagate, ultimately leading to infection and potential cell death.
Once inside a cell, a virus's genetic material takes over of the cell's functions. It instructs the cell to produce the virus's proteins and genetic material. These proteins and genetic material then assemble into new viruses.
yes plant have protein for livingPlants, animals, bacteria, virus, and all known life forms do have proteins. They are coded in their genetic material (DNA or RNA). Proteins are synthesized in the cytoplasm of the cell.
Protein synthesis is important for viruses because the virus forces the host cell to make proteins that the cell does not need, but the virus does to repoduce. Protein synthesis is important for cells because the proteins are essential for all cellular activites.
No, viruses do not have ribosomes. Instead, they rely on the host cell's machinery to replicate and produce proteins. Viruses lack many of the cellular structures and organelles found in living organisms.
Yes, very much so. Ribosomes in prokaryotes use a slightly different process to produce proteins than do ribosomes in eukaryotes. Fortunately, this difference presents a window of molecular attack by antibiotic drugs such as streptomycin.Unfortunately, some bacterial toxins and the polio virus also use it to enable them to attack thetranslation mechanism in our cells.
Mumps virus synthesizes its proteins using its RNA genome as a template through a process called translation. The virus carries a single-stranded RNA genome that encodes for several proteins, including the nucleoprotein (N), matrix protein (M), fusion protein (F), and hemagglutinin-neuraminidase (HN). These proteins are essential for the virus's replication, assembly, and ability to infect host cells. The viral RNA is translated by the host's ribosomes to produce these proteins.
If viruses manage to deliver their RNA to the host's ribosomes, the ribosomes will begin translating the viral RNA into proteins. These viral proteins can include structural components necessary for new virus particles and enzymes that aid in viral replication. This process effectively hijacks the host's cellular machinery, allowing the virus to replicate and propagate, ultimately leading to infection and potential cell death.
Ribosomes are the smallest between mitochondria, viruses, bacterium, and protein. Ribosomes are the building blocks of mitochondria, viruses, bacterium, and proteins.
Virus do not have. They do not have any organells
Once inside a cell, a virus's genetic material takes over of the cell's functions. It instructs the cell to produce the virus's proteins and genetic material. These proteins and genetic material then assemble into new viruses.
Yes, that's the ony way
When a cell is infected with virus it sends out an interferon to warn other cells around it to stop transcription and translation and to produce antiviral proteins
The proteins in the capsid allow the virus to attach to the "docking stations" proteins of the host cell.
The proteins in the capsid allow the virus to attach to the "docking stations" proteins of the host cell.
yes plant have protein for livingPlants, animals, bacteria, virus, and all known life forms do have proteins. They are coded in their genetic material (DNA or RNA). Proteins are synthesized in the cytoplasm of the cell.