1 / 17

Bellwork : February 11 Copy the question and the answer

Bellwork : February 11 Copy the question and the answer. Both euglena and cyanobacteria are photosynthetic unicellular organisms found in pond water. The feature that distinguishes euglena from cyanobacteria is the — A ability to maintain homeostasis B presence of ribosomes

zuzela
Télécharger la présentation

Bellwork : February 11 Copy the question and the answer

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Bellwork: February 11Copy the question and the answer Both euglena and cyanobacteria are photosynthetic unicellular organisms found in pond water. The feature that distinguishes euglena from cyanobacteria is the — A ability to maintain homeostasis B presence of ribosomes C ability to reproduce D presence of a nuclear membrane

  2. CO: I will describe viral reproduction.LO:I will write notes and talk about the steps in viral reproduction. I will build a virus.

  3. Science Fact of the Day:Corneas are the only tissues that don't require blood.

  4. OVERVIEW

  5. Quick Write: • Are viruses alive? • Explain why or why not.

  6. When a virus invades…

  7. Active Viruses Hidden Viruses Host Parasite VIRUS Organisms that live on or near a host and cause harm. A living thing that provides a source of energy for a virus or an organism A tiny, nonliving structure that invades and then multiplies inside of a cell. Some viruses hide for a while and become part of the cell’s genetic material. It may stay inactive and “hidden” for years. Then under certain conditions it becomes active and acts like an active virus. Ex – cold sores A virus that immediately goes into action. It begins to take over cell functions and produce the virus’s proteins and genetic material. These parts then assemble into new viruses. The viruses multiply like a copy machine left on. When it is full the cell bursts open – releases the new viruses and dies.

  8. Lytic Cycle • Active viruses enter cells and immediately begin to multiply, leading to the quick death of the invaded cells. • Steps to the lytic cycle: • Attach to cell • Inject DNA/RNA • Produce (replicate)virus parts • Assemble new virons • Release viruses to infect other cells

  9. - Viruses Lytic Cycle

  10. Lysogenic Cycle • Hidden viruses “hide” for a while inside host cells before becoming active Steps to the Lysogenic Cycle: • Attach to cell • Inject DNA/RNA • Integrate DNA/RNA into cell • Wait • Remove DNA/RNA • Become active (lytic cycle)

  11. - Viruses Lysogenic Cycle

  12. Rally Robin: Cycle Steps • Get into partners—decide who is partner A and who is partner B. • Partner A: Describe the steps for the Lytic cycle. • Partner B: Draw each step. • After a few minutes, we will switch to the Lysogenic Cycle and you will switch roles.

  13. Lytic Cycle Lysogenic Cycle

  14. Could viruses be helpful?

  15. Since viruses can transport DNA and RNA into cells, scientists are exploring GeneTherapy • In Gene Therapy, viral genetic material is replaced with new DNA • In time, this could be used to cure genetic diseases. Currently we have no cure for these types of illnesses

  16. You decide…Lytic or Lysogenic Dengue Fever

  17. For spread of infection Thursday.. • Could we be the Last of Us?

More Related