4. Viruses
Viruses are the smallest microorganisms.
To see them, an optic microscope is not enough. We need a much more powerful electronic microscope.
They have a very simple structure:
- A capsid. It is a protein coat
that can have different shapes
(helical, icosahedral, etc.)
- A genome. It is a nucleic acid (DNA or RNA).
It’s the genetic material of the virus.
Some of them, have also an envelope. That is a cellular membrane that comes from the previous infected cell.
They cannot be considered living beings, because they don’t perform all the vital functions. Viruses don’t feed, don’t move by themselves, and don’t interact with their environment. They only can reproduce, but they must do it infecting a host cell like a parasite.
A virus attaches itself to a cell. Then, it invades the cell and puts its genetic material into the cell. This genetic material contains instructions, which the cell must follow. The instructions are very simple: make more viruses just like the invader.
The infected cell begins to make viruses, and cannot stop. Sometimes the new viruses fill the cell and make it explode. Other times the virus stays inside the cell for some time.
Viruses can infect every type of cells and all of them are pathogens that provoke diseases in the infected organism.
Some examples of human viral diseases are cold, influenza, SIDA, measles, mumps, poliomyelitis, viral meningitis, etc.
READING ACTIVITIES
After reading the text, copy and answer the following questions into your notebook:
Remember: you must make complete sentences.
4.1. Answer the following questions about viruses:
a. Why viruses are not considered living beings?
b. Is there any beneficial virus? Why?
c. How many parts can we distinguish in a virus?
4.2. Listen to the description of viruses and complete the text
with the missing words.
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Now,
check
your
answers!