Viruses
- Viruses did not find a place in classification since they are not truly ‘living’, if we understand living as those organisms that have a cell structure.
- The viruses are non-cellular organisms that are characterized by having an inert crystalline structure outside the living cell.
- Viruses are obligate parasites. Once they infect a cell, they take over the machinery of the host cell to replicate themselves, killing the host.
- The name virus that means venom or poisonous fluid was given by Pasteur.
- In addition to proteins, viruses also contain genetic material, that could be either RNA or DNA.
- No virus contains both RNA & DNA.
- In general,
- viruses that infect plants have single-stranded RNA &
- viruses that infect animals have either single or double-stranded RNA or double-stranded DNA
- bacteriophages (viruses that infect bacteria) are usually double-stranded DNA viruses.
- The protein coat called capsid made of small subunits called capsomeres protects the nucleic acid.
- These capsomeres are arranged in helical or polyhedral geometric forms.
- Viruses cause diseases like mumps, smallpox, herpes & influenza. AIDS is also caused by a virus.
- In plants, the symptoms can be mosaic formation, leaf rolling & curling, yellowing & vein clearing, dwarfing & stunted growth.
Viroids
- Viroids are infectious agents that are smaller than viruses.
- A viroid is a free RNA, it lacks the protein coat that is found in viruses, hence the name viroid.
- The RNA of the viroid was of low molecular weight.
- Viroids cause potato spindle tuber disease.
Virus | Viroid |
It is a nucleoprotein particle. | It is an RNA Particle. |
Nucleic Acid can be DNA or RNA. | Viroid is formed of only RNA. |
A protein covering of coat is present. | A protein coat is absent. |
Virus has a larger size. | Viroid has a smaller size. |
Virus infects all types of organisms. | Viroid infects only plants. |
Difference Between Virus & Bacteria
- Bacteria are single-cell, living organisms that can survive without a host.
- They can live on surfaces, in soil, in water, & in the air.
- You can kill them by messing with their ability to do cellular respiration or their ability to grow.
- Antibiotics are used to treat bacterial infections because antibiotics kill bacteria.
- Hence Antibiotics are useless against viruses.
- There are some antiviral drugs that help protect you from a viral infection.
- Antivirals either make it harder for the virus to get into the cell or they prevent the virus from reproducing once they are inside of your cells.
- Most bacteria reproduce by simply dividing into two.
- Bacteria can cause diseases such as pneumonia & food poisoning.
- However, not all bacteria are bad. In fact, some friendly types actually help protect us from the disease.
Virus | Bacteria |
They are very Small | They are larger in size as compared to virus |
Non-Cellular | Single-Celled |
Have no metabolism of their own | Have metabolism of their own |
Take no food by any method | Take food by absorption |
Do not grow & do not divide | Grow in size & divide to produce more bacteria (by Cell-Division) |
Command the host cell to produce virus | They can reproduce by their own |
Can be crystallised | Cannot be crystallised |
All produce diseases in man, animals & plants | Some are harmless, some useful & some are disease-causing |
Contains only genetic material & protective coating | Contains various cells subunits or organelles such as cytoplasm & cell wall which all perform specific functions |
They have simpler DNA (if their genetic material is DNA) | They have more complex DNA |
Multiply faster than bacteria | Multiply slower than Viruses |
They are Non-Living | They are living |
Vaccines prevent the spread & antiviral medicines help to slow reproduction but cannot stop it completely | They can be treated with Antibiotics |
Example– Common Cold, Flu & Sore Throat | Example– Strep Throat, Tuberculosis, Whooping Cough |
Difference Between DNA & RNA Viruses
- A virus can self-replicate inside a host cell.
- The infected cells may produce thousands of new copies of the original virus at an extraordinary rate.
- The genetic material of a virus can be either DNA or RNA.
- The viruses that contain DNA as their genetic material are called the DNA viruses.
- RNA viruses, on the other hand, contain RNA as their genetic material.
- DNA viruses are mostly double-stranded while RNA viruses are single-stranded.
- RNA mutation rate is higher than the DNA mutation rate.
- DNA replication takes place in the nucleus while RNA replication takes place in the cytoplasm.
- DNA viruses are stable while RNA viruses are unstable.
- Antigens: A substance which the body recognizes as alien & which induces an immune response.
- Antibodies: A blood protein produced by the body in response to & counteracting an antigen.
Difference between DNA vs RNA
DNA | RNA |
Deoxyribonucleic Acid | Ribonucleic Acid |
Double-Stranded | Single Stranded |
Deoxyribose Sugar | Ribose Sugar |
Self Replicate | Can’t Self-Replicate It is synthesized from DNA when required |
Occurs inside the nucleus & of cell & some cell organelles (mitochondria) but in plants, it is present in mitochondria & plant cell | It is found in the cytoplasm of the cell but very little is found inside the nucleus. |
DNA is the genetic material in all living organisms | RNA is the genetic material in some viruses |
Long Polymer Chain | Shorter Polymer Chain |
Life of DNA is longer | Its life is short |
DNA occurs only in one form in any organism | 3 types of RNA are present in an organism: – mRNA, rRNA, tRNA |
DNA is functional in the transmission of genetic information It forms as a media for long-term storage | RNA is functional is the transmission of the genetic code that is necessary for the protein creation from the nucleus to the ribosome |
Bases present are Adenine, Guanine, Cytosine, & Thymine | Bases present are Adenine, Guanine, Cytosine & Uracil |
Difference between Gene & Genome
Gene | Genome |
A gene is a part of DNA Molecule. | The genome is total DNA in a cell. |
The hereditary element of genetic information. | All set of nuclear DNAs. |
Encodes protein synthesis. | Encodes both proteins & regulatory elements for protein synthesis. |
Length is about a few hundreds of bases. | Length of the genome of a higher organism is about billion base pairs. |
A higher organism has about thousands of genes. | Each organism has only one genome. |
Variations of the gene named alleles can be naturally selected. | Horizontal gene transfer & duplication cause large variations in the genome. |
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