Biology, Pages 334-346Neil Campbell and Jane Reece's BIOLOGY remains unsurpassed as the most successful majors biology textbook in the world. This text has invited more than 4 million students into the study of this dynamic and essential discipline. |
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Page 24
... produced within the cell . Each of these phages can then infect a healthy cell , and a few successive lytic cycles can destroy an entire bacterial population 338 in just a few hours . A phage that reproduces only by a lytic cycle is a ...
... produced within the cell . Each of these phages can then infect a healthy cell , and a few successive lytic cycles can destroy an entire bacterial population 338 in just a few hours . A phage that reproduces only by a lytic cycle is a ...
Page 51
... produces is often obscure . Viruses may damage or kill cells by causing the release of hydrolytic enzymes from lysosomes . Some viruses cause infected cells to produce toxins that lead to disease symptoms , and some have molecular ...
... produces is often obscure . Viruses may damage or kill cells by causing the release of hydrolytic enzymes from lysosomes . Some viruses cause infected cells to produce toxins that lead to disease symptoms , and some have molecular ...
Page 77
... produce a mass , or colony , of 107 to 108 bacteria within 12 hours . Reproductive rates in the organism's natural habitat , the large intestine ( colon ) of mammals , can be much slower . One doubling in the human colon takes about 12 ...
... produce a mass , or colony , of 107 to 108 bacteria within 12 hours . Reproductive rates in the organism's natural habitat , the large intestine ( colon ) of mammals , can be much slower . One doubling in the human colon takes about 12 ...
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animal viruses bacterial cell bacterial chromosome bacteriophage bacterium bind to specific capsid cause disease cellular enzymes circular coli cell Cycles of Phages DNA molecule double-stranded emerging viruses enter the host enveloped viruses eukaryotes existing viruses Figure genetic recombination glycoproteins herpesvirus host cell host range host species human disease immune system kill the host lysogenic cycle lytic cycle mechanisms membranous envelope microbes model systems mosaic virus TMV mRNA mutation natural selection favors nucleic acid obligate intracellular parasites particles phage DNA plant to plant plant viruses plasmids plasmodesmata polymerase prions prokaryotic prophage genes protein coat provirus restriction enzymes retrovirus reverse transcriptase RNA viruses Scientists simplest spread stranded RNA symptoms syndrome synthesis temperate phage template tobacco mosaic virus transcribed transposons type of virus vaccines vertical transmission viral diseases viral DNA viral envelope viral genome viral infection viral nucleic acid viral proteins viral reproductive cycle viroids virulent phage viruses and bacteria viruses cause