Science, asked by shriyu2006, 8 months ago

What lives inside the host cell

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Answered by rudrranisrivastava43
0

Answer:

Bacteria, protists and fungus can regenerate and reproduce by cell division without the requirement of a host body. In contrast, viruses are considered to be between living and nonliving because outside the host acts as nonliving and inside the host, they multiply and thus are living. since they can only reproduce in the host cells. This is because the proteins and components required to build their body structures are not encoded by the viral nucleic acids. Thus they rely on host cells for building factors and can only reproduce by infecting living host cells.

Answered by irshadalam7864
0

Answer:

Viruses depend on the host cells that they infect to reproduce. ... An infected cell produces more viral protein and genetic material instead of its usual products. Some viruses may remain dormant inside host cells for long periods, causing no obvious change in their host cells (a stage known as the lysogenic phase).

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