Biology, asked by password9033, 11 months ago

How is virus different from viroid

Answers

Answered by asthakz
6

Answer:

Viroids are plant pathogens: small, single-stranded, circular RNA particles that are much simpler than a virus. They do not have a capsid or outer envelope, but, as with viruses, can reproduce only within a host cell. Viroids do not, however, manufacture any proteins. They produce only a single, specific RNA molecule.

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Answered by astha23kz
5

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Answer:

Viroids differ from viruses on six points : They exist inside the cells as RNA particles only, without capsid nor envelope. ... Their RNA do not code for any protein. Unlike certain viruses, viroids do not need the help of a virus to infect a cell.

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