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Published byLizbeth Watson Modified over 9 years ago
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Living or Not?
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Living organisms must… Be made of :carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen cells Be able to:reproduce grow and develop, repair self eat or produce food exchange material with environment move respond to stimuli
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Maintain homeostasis Reproduction Cellular organization Metabolism (use energy) Contain genetic information
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Virus (latin for poison) Technically not considered to be living since they do not display most of the characteristics of living things Outside a living cell, a virus is a lifeless chemical carrying out no life function on its own Once inside it is able to “hijack” the cell to reproduce
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Viruses are extremely small measured in nanometers (nm) = 10 -9 of a metre Cannot be seen without electron microscopes They are made of biological particles but are not arranged in cell structures. Biological Molecules: Protein nucleic acids Χ carbohydrates Required to form Χ lipids cell membrane
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protective protein coat + nucleic acid core capsid contain either DNA or RNA = 95% of total virus gives its shape Ex) bacteriophage
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The History of Prions The History of Prions
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No fossil evidence Speculations: 1) once cellular organisms that lived as parasites that gradually lost their own cellular components 2) once free-living, pre-cellular forms that later became parasites of cellular organisms 3) arose from detached fragments of the genetic material of cellular organisms
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Lifeless chemical Carries out no life functions on its own Made of a protein coat and nucleic acid
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Not every virus is considered to be a disease-causing agent Ex) tobacco mosaic virus do not appear to destroy plant tissue Viruses are generally selective affecting only specific hosts’ cells
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Disease causing agent Virus (prion/viroid), bacteria, protist, fungi Responsible for triggering symptoms Refers to an observable behavior or state. Symptoms are the infected individual’s response to a foreign object in the body Fever/chills Headache Rash nausea
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Infection Foreign organism present in/on an individual Disease The set of symptoms that result from an infection by a pathogen having a characteristic set of signs and symptoms Extrinsic factors/cause Disorder Abnormality of function that has a cluster of symptoms Intrinsic factors/cause Condition Perhaps the least specific, often denoting states of health considered normal or healthy but nevertheless posing implications for the provision of health care Syndrome The recognizable set of features, signs, symptoms, phenomena or characteristics that together are characteristic of a specific disorder, disease, or genetic condition the presence of one feature alerts to the presence of the others.
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Medical? How to treat? No cure; only influence the symptoms Employ for patient benefit Genetic “engineering” Societal? How are human behaviour & interactions affected? Ethical? Replace need for embryonic stem cells Use in warfare
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Vehicles for virus (pathogen) transmission
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Vector – disease transmitter/carrier ex. Animal saliva Pathogen – Disease “causer” ex. Virus or bacteria
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Electron micrograph of Ebola Zaire virus. This is the first photo ever taken,on 10/13/1976 by Dr. F.A. Murphy, now at UC Davis, then at CDC. Diagnostic specimen in cell culture at 160,000 x magnification. [brettrussell.com]
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