Answer: 1. nucleoid, capsid, envelope, enzymes.
A. Nucleoids represents the viral chromosomes, it is made up of single molecular which is either linear or coiling.
B. Capsid is the proteinacious covering around the virus that protects the nucleoids from damage and it consists of subunits called capsomere and campaigners.
C. Envelope is the loose membrane covering that occur in some viruses consisting of protein from lipids and carbohydrates(from host).
D. Enzymes are occasionally enzymes lysozymes is present in the region that comes in contact with host cell in bacteria pages.
2. Due to their nature of behaving like simple chemical compounds outside the living host.
3. Virus recognises it's host cell through the receptors they carry and virus can also trick the cell into taking them by bulk transport called endocytosis.
4. The development of CRISPR immune system to fight against phages.
5. Lytic involves reproduction of viruses by using host cell for virus manufacturing while lysogenic cycles involves integration of viral genome into host DNA and reproducing with it.
6. The life cycle of hic
a. Attachment and entry- this happens in two stages attachment and fusion.
B. Reverse Transcription- when hiv enters the cell it must be reverse transcribed into proviral DNA before integrating into the DNA of host.
C. Integration- after conversion into DNA, hiv integrate enzyme attaches itself to the proviral DNA strands it passes through the wall of cell nucleus.
D. Transcription and Translation- they become active when they encounter an infectious agent.
7. Bacterial viruses are classified under viruses that affect the ecoil.
-DNA phages of T series where the T phages of ecoil are larger lyric phages that contain single molecule of double stranded DNA
-Temprate pages: bacterial phage lambda
-Small DNA phage: the genome of some bacteria phage encoded 10-12 protein
-RNA phage- some e coil bacterial phage contains a genome composed of RNA instead of DNA.
B. ANIMAL viruses are classified by genome type and MNRA synthesis path way.
-DNA viruses (classes 1 and 2) commonly used in the study of DNA replication.
-RNA viruses(classes 3 and 4) have RNA genome and all animal cells belong to this class.
8. They are made of protein.
They contain genetic codes needed for reproduction.
-viruses do not fit our normal life because viral reproduction is not possible without a host cell and it doesn't consume energy to survive that is metabolic processes within the cell.
9. The DNA sequences which can move around the genome changing their number of copies or location often affecting the nearest genes.
- plasmids and trasposoons are mobile transferable genetic elements through bacterial conjugation which is a horizontal mechanism gene transfer while viruses can move due to their adaptive replication strategy.
10. They cause infectious diseases by entering a living and normal cell, thereby using the cell to reproduce other viruses of them selves and infecting the immune system of the living cell.
11. -introduction of viral pathogens into a new host species.
-establishment of pathogens in New host.
-dissemination of pathogens among large number of individual of new host species.
12. In a nut shell, transmission of viruses occur horizontally is the transmission of viruses among plants of same generation while vertical transmission is between full grown plants and the seed from it to ensure transmission from current generation to the next generation.
13. Virions is the infectious form of viruses as it exists outside the host cell designed for transmission of nucleic acid genome amongst hosts while a prion is neither bacterial nor fungal nor viral and contains no genetic materials.
Explanation:2. They have long and non living thing characteristics in nature.
4. This is an act of copying a snipet of phages they come in contact with into a memory to help build against subsequent attacks by viruses in future.
6. The life cycle of hiv consists of 4 stages which includes the process of entering , reverse integration where the RNA enzymes reverse transcribed into DNA , integration where it passes through the walls of the cell and finally the last stage where it becomes activated.
N.B
Most of the answers required explanations above in order to avoid repetition of answers.