front 1 Viruses can vary with respect to all of the following characteristics except _____. (eText Overview)
| back 1 B |
front 2 A microbiologist analyzes chemicals obtained from an enveloped RNA virus that infects monkeys. He finds that the viral envelope contains a protein characteristic of monkey cells. Which of the following is the most likely explanation? ( Concept 19.1)
| back 2 A |
front 3 Which of the following, if any, may be a component of a virus? ( Concept 19.1)
| back 3 E |
front 4 Viruses that infect bacteria are called _____. ( Concept 19.1)
| back 4 D |
front 5 HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, only infects certain cells within the immune system. This is because _____. ( Concept 19.2)
| back 5 E |
front 6 Cancer cells often have protein receptor molecules on their surfaces that differ from those on normal body cells. Given this fact, how might viruses be used to treat cancer? ( Concept 19.2)
| back 6 A |
front 7 Why are phages useful in treating bacterial infections in humans? ( Concept 19.2)
| back 7 E |
front 8 Which of the following can a virus do without a host cell? ( Concept 19.2)
| back 8 E |
front 9 When a virus infects an E. coli cell, what part of the virus enters the bacterial cytoplasm? ( Concept 19.2)
| back 9 A |
front 10 The phage reproductive cycle that kills the bacterial host cell is a _____ cycle, and a phage that always reproduces this way is a _____ phage. ( Concept 19.2)
| back 10 E |
front 11 In the lytic life cycle of phages _____. ( Concept 19.2)
| back 11 E |
front 12 Restriction enzymes help defend bacteria against viral infections by _____. ( Concept 19.2)
| back 12 D |
front 13 A phage that inserts itself into the host DNA is called _____. ( Concept 19.2)
| back 13 A |
front 14 A prophage is a(n) _____. ( Concept 19.2)
| back 14 E |
front 15 In the lysogenic cycle of phages _____. ( Concept 19.2)
| back 15 E |
front 16 What is the origin of the phospholipid membrane that envelops many animal viruses? ( Concept 19.2)
| back 16 C |
front 17 Why can flare-ups of herpesvirus infection recur throughout a person's life? ( Concept 19.2)
| back 17 E |
front 18 How do retroviruses, such as HIV, differ from other viruses? ( Concept 19.2)
| back 18 B |
front 19 Reverse transcription, carried out by retroviruses, is the process by which _____. ( Concept 19.2)
| back 19 C |
front 20 Which statement below is a correct comparison of a "regular" RNA virus and an RNA retrovirus? ( Concept 19.2)
| back 20 D |
front 21 When comparing DNA and RNA viruses, which mutate more quickly, and why? ( Concept 19.2)
| back 21 C |
front 22 The symptoms of a viral infection in a person can be caused by _____. ( Concept 19.3)
| back 22 E |
front 23 Vaccines for viral diseases are _____ and help prevent infection by _____. ( Concept 19.3)
| back 23 B |
front 24 Emerging viruses can originate from which of the following sources? ( Concept 19.3)
| back 24 D |
front 25 What is the function of hemagglutinin in the influenza virus? ( Concept 19.3)
| back 25 C |
front 26 Birds act as a natural _____ for the influenza _____ virus.( Concept 19.3)
| back 26 E |
front 27 Which of the following is an example of vertical transmission of a virus in plants? ( Concept 19.3)
| back 27 D |
front 28 Plant viruses spread throughout the plant by way of _____. ( Concept 19.3)
| back 28 E |
front 29 Circular RNA molecules that function like a virus in plants are termed _____. ( Concept 19.3)
| back 29 C |
front 30 Prions are _____ that are thought to cause disease by _____. ( Concept 19.3)
| back 30 C |
front 31 A new pathogenic form of influenza A can emerge when _____.( Concept 19.3)
| back 31 A |
front 32 What is the prevailing hypothesis for the surprisingly low infection and mortality rate among people over 64 years of age during the 2009 H1N1 pandemic? ( Concept 19.3)
| back 32 B |
front 33 The avian flu virus H5N1 is considered a greater long-term threat than the swine flu virus H1N1 because _____. ( Concept 19.3)
| back 33 A |