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9.9: Introduction to Virus Replication

  • Page ID
    44428
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    What you’ll learn to do: Identify different viruses and how they replicate

    While viruses technically aren’t living things (they don’t have cells), they still have DNA or RNA. Despite being “nonliving,” viruses play an important role in evolutionary pressures on all living things, so it is important to study them.

    Viruses are diverse entities. They vary in their structure, their replication methods, and in their target hosts. Nearly all forms of life—from bacteria and archaea to eukaryotes such as plants, animals, and fungi—have viruses that infect them. While most biological diversity can be understood through evolutionary history, such as how species have adapted to conditions and environments, much about virus origins and evolution remains unknown.

    In this section, we’ll learn how viruses reproduce. As we do, you can compare viral replication to DNA replication in living things. We will finish by looking at other nonliving infectious agents.

    Contributors and Attributions

    CC licensed content, Original
    • Introduction to Virus Replication. Authored by: Shelli Carter and Lumen Learning. Provided by: Lumen Learning. License: CC BY: Attribution
    CC licensed content, Shared previously

    9.9: Introduction to Virus Replication is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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