3: Viruses and Viral Infections
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- 3.1: Viruses
- Viruses are acellular, parasitic entities that are not classified within any kingdom. Viruses are not cells and cannot divide. They infect a host cell and use the host’s replication processes to produce identical progeny virus particles. Viruses infect organisms as diverse as bacteria, plants, and animals and exist in a netherworld between a living organism and a nonliving entity. Living things grow, metabolize, and reproduce.
- 3.2: The Viruses
- Since viruses lack ribosomes (and thus rRNA), they cannot be classified within the Three Domain Classification scheme with cellular organisms. Alternatively, Dr. David Baltimore derived a viral classification scheme, one that focuses on the relationship between a viral genome to how it produces its mRNA. The Baltimore Scheme recognizes seven classes of viruses.