Hijacking Host Cells: The Intricacy of Viral Replication and Transmission

What does a virus use a cells machinery to do?

Replicate

A virus is a tiny infectious agent that is not capable of replicating itself outside of a host cell. Instead, it uses a host cell’s machinery to replicate itself. Once a virus enters a host cell, it takes over the cell’s genetic material and hijacks the essential metabolic processes of the cell, forcing it to produce viral proteins and new copies of the virus.

The virus uses the host cell’s machinery to translate its own genetic material into viral proteins, which are then assembled into new viral particles. These new virus particles can then be released from the infected host cell to infect other cells in the host organism or be transmitted to a new host.

In summary, viruses use a cell’s machinery to replicate themselves and produce new viral particles, by hijacking the host cell’s genetic material and metabolic processes.

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