It will have no direct effect on the organism ::x:
It will cause a disease in the organism.
A parasite is any organism that lives on or in another organism, not necessarily a fungus, virus or bacteria.
Viruses can cause lytic infections or lysogenic infections. When a virus enters a cell to make copies of itself, causing the cell to rupture, that is called a lytic infection. A lysogenic infection is where a virus incorporates itself into the DNA of the cell it invades and replicates its genetic code.
On its own, a virus is lifeless. A virus must have a host cell such as bacteria, plant or animal in which to live and grow. When it attaches to one of these organism's it grows and reproduces, forming more viruses to invade other cells.
variola virus
A virulent virus is a virus that has severe symptoms and is usually a dangerous disease. A temperate virus is a less violent sickness that may show little to no symptoms.
It will have no direct effect on the organism ::x: It will cause a disease in the organism.
It will have no direct effect on the organism ::x: It will cause a disease in the organism.
It will have no direct effect on the organism ::x: It will cause a disease in the organism.
The Norwalk virus (Norovirus) does not have a lyosgenic cycle. It does not remain dormant as lysogenic viruses can.
Lysogenic cycle.
Some do have a lytic cycle but some have a lysogenic cycle. The common cold is a virus that has a lytic cycle. HIV has a lysogenic (hides) cycle.
Stress can make a virus worse than it currently is, and can even activate a dormant virus. A virus that is hiding and not doing anything is considered to be in what scientists call the lysogenic cycle. Stress can cause a virus in the lysogenic cycle to advance to the lytic cycle, which is the state at which the virus advances and actually takes effect.
The lysogenic cycle is a cycle inside virus
It will destroy cells in the organism
It will destroy cells in the organism
It will destroy cells in the organism
In the lytic cycle, the virus lyses, or destroys the host cell after the virus has reproduced using the host cell's machinery. In the lysogenic cycle, this does not happen. A virus in the lysogenic cycle can, however, enter the lytic cycle.