Cells are the basic unit of life in living organisms, containing complex structures and machinery for carrying out various functions. Viruses, on the other hand, are non-living infectious agents that require host cells to replicate. Unlike cells, viruses lack the cellular machinery for metabolism and reproduction, relying on host cells to carry out these processes.
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.
The cell invaded by the virus is called a host cell because it provides the environment and resources necessary for the virus to replicate and multiply. The virus uses the host cell's machinery to produce more viruses, ultimately leading to the destruction of the host cell.
It is called a host cell. The virus attaches to the cell and injects its DNA into the cell. The virus's DNA overruns the "instructions" that the cell has and "tells" the cell to make copies of the virus using the DNA. Then the cell makes so many copies of the virus, that it explodes. The new viruses then go on to attach to other cells.
When a virus takes over a cell's machinery, it hijacks the cell's resources to replicate itself. The virus uses the cell's machinery to produce more copies of the virus, eventually leading to cell damage or death. This process can contribute to the spread of the virus throughout the body.
A virus reproduces inside a host cell. It takes over the host cell's machinery to replicate its own genetic material and produce new virus particles. This can cause harm to the host cell and lead to the spread of the virus to other cells.
Parasitic
Parasitic
has a cell membrane
cell wall, central vacuole, and chloroplasts
B cells mark the virus or paracite as unknown the killer t cells attack and destroy the virus.
No where. A virus is not a cell.
the differences between the paramecuim cell and the elodea cell is that paramecuim- hunt for food, live by itself, single cell creature. elodea- make their onw food, cannot live alone, multicullar cells. (lots of cells)
a virus uses leg-like appendages to clamp onto a cell and a spike or chemical coating to penetrate the cell wall http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-the-difference-between-a-virus-and-a-bacteria.htm
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.
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.
Animal cells have no cell Walls and plant cells have a cell wall
Attachment, or adsorption, occurs between the virus and the host cell membrane. A hole forms in the cell membrane, then the virus particle or its genetic contents are released into the host cell, where viral reproduction may begin.