Asked by Anonymous
What are the similarities between Prion and virus?
Answers
Answered by
Ms. Sue
http://learnsomescience.com/microbiology/viruses-viroids-and-prions/
Answered by
Elena
The basic difference is their components.
Viruses contain both nucleic acids (DNA or RNA) and a protein coat. Viruses cause infection by inserting their genetic material in a host cell. The host cell then replicates and reads the genetic material, making new viruses that eventually burst out of the cell and leave to infect more. The reason viruses cause disease is that the infected cells cannot carry out the normal functions necessary because its machinery is being used by the virus, and eventually the cell dies.
Viroids have no protein coat, but are only the nucleic acid (RNA). Because of this, they are often carried around inside viruses. For example, Hepatitis D is a viroid that is carried in the capsid of the Hepatitis B virus.
Prions are only proteins without the nucleic acid. They generally have their effect by causing an infected individual's DNA to start producing an altered form of a protein that they would normally produce. This altered form cannot be broken down by your cells and it therefore accumulates, eventually causing cell death as it needs more and more space.
Viruses contain both nucleic acids (DNA or RNA) and a protein coat. Viruses cause infection by inserting their genetic material in a host cell. The host cell then replicates and reads the genetic material, making new viruses that eventually burst out of the cell and leave to infect more. The reason viruses cause disease is that the infected cells cannot carry out the normal functions necessary because its machinery is being used by the virus, and eventually the cell dies.
Viroids have no protein coat, but are only the nucleic acid (RNA). Because of this, they are often carried around inside viruses. For example, Hepatitis D is a viroid that is carried in the capsid of the Hepatitis B virus.
Prions are only proteins without the nucleic acid. They generally have their effect by causing an infected individual's DNA to start producing an altered form of a protein that they would normally produce. This altered form cannot be broken down by your cells and it therefore accumulates, eventually causing cell death as it needs more and more space.
Answered by
Aman
They are both disease causing
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