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Originally posted by Bedlam
reply to post by ImaFungi
They dock to the appropriate receptor on a cell, the capsid inserts the contents into the cell, and Bob's your uncle.
Once the data package is in there, it hijacks the cell's resources to reproduce itself.
Originally posted by Bedlam
reply to post by ImaFungi
They dock to the appropriate receptor on a cell, the capsid inserts the contents into the cell, and Bob's your uncle.
Once the data package is in there, it hijacks the cell's resources to reproduce itself.
Originally posted by rickymouse
Originally posted by Bedlam
reply to post by ImaFungi
They dock to the appropriate receptor on a cell, the capsid inserts the contents into the cell, and Bob's your uncle.
Once the data package is in there, it hijacks the cell's resources to reproduce itself.
Your explanation kind of sounds like a college guy to meedit on 1-3-2013 by rickymouse because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by ImaFungi
Originally posted by Bedlam
reply to post by ImaFungi
They dock to the appropriate receptor on a cell, the capsid inserts the contents into the cell, and Bob's your uncle.
Once the data package is in there, it hijacks the cell's resources to reproduce itself.
So why would this activity not be considered "doing something"? You said they dont do anything on their own.
Are there any non living 'things' that are able to do similar things like you just mentioned?
Originally posted by PsykoOps
reply to post by 1nquisitive
Thx, I'm going to have to see this sometime. It wont let me watch it from bbc
Found the clip I was talking about as YT video. Science is effin awesome!
Also just noticed it's bacteria and not a virus. This is not my field at alledit on 1/3/2013 by PsykoOps because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by Bedlam
Originally posted by ImaFungi
Originally posted by Bedlam
reply to post by ImaFungi
They dock to the appropriate receptor on a cell, the capsid inserts the contents into the cell, and Bob's your uncle.
Once the data package is in there, it hijacks the cell's resources to reproduce itself.
So why would this activity not be considered "doing something"? You said they dont do anything on their own.
Are there any non living 'things' that are able to do similar things like you just mentioned?
Sure. Any protein that docks to a cell receptor does about the same thing. It's all van der Waals forces and electrostatic charges, it's not like it's got propellers and sensor suites.
Originally posted by ImaFungi
by those forces and charges, are you saying the molecular material is just trying to organize it self in the lowest energy state or something? and the results of that are the virus doing its thing and protein doing its thing?
Could you not simplify all human behavior don to van der waals forces and electrostatic charges?
Originally posted by Bedlam
Originally posted by ImaFungi
by those forces and charges, are you saying the molecular material is just trying to organize it self in the lowest energy state or something? and the results of that are the virus doing its thing and protein doing its thing?
Basically, yes. The virus displays a charge pattern on the capsid which is the corollary of the receptor it's designed to fit. They attract each other, then if the cell's unlucky, it ends up infected. Note that the virus isn't actively making this happen, it's a static function of the capsid design.
Could you not simplify all human behavior don to van der waals forces and electrostatic charges?
No. The virus isn't *doing anything*, it's just drifting around. It doesn't make or expend energy. It doesn't make new proteins. Some viruses are just naked nuclear material. For some reason, cells will pick up loose DNA or RNA and look at it. Bacteria are really bad about that. You get a lot of genetic material floating around in the environment, bacteria will pick it up and parse it, sometimes add it to plasmids or its main DNA, which is how they sometimes acquire resistance to antibiotics from each other.
These enzyme-catalyzed reactions allow organisms to grow and reproduce, maintain their structures, and respond to their environments. The word metabolism can also refer to all chemical reactions that occur in living organisms, including digestion and the transport of substances into and between different cells, in which case the set of reactions within the cells is called intermediary metabolism or intermediate metabolism.
Originally posted by ImaFungi
interesting. How is it thought viruses first came into existence,
and how are they made now, what do they come from/what creates them (or do all viruses share a common ancestor virus and there is an unbroken chain of virus back to the beginning?)?
How drastically would the biological environment change if all viruses on earth today were eliminated?