Latent Viruses: some viruses can be latent. That means that after the virus enters a cell, its hereditary material can become part of the cell's hereditary material.
A Latent Virus
A latent cell. You can remember this because the word "latent" has the word "late" in it, and a latent cell does not take over right away, therefor it is "late".
A dormant virus is a type of virus that enters the cell and remains inactive for a period of time before starting to replicate and cause symptoms. During this dormant phase, the virus may integrate its genetic material into the host cell's genome or remain in a latent state until conditions are favorable for replication.
The virus enters the host cell in the penetration phase.
latent
an example of a latent virus is a host cell
A virus can enter a cell and integrate its genetic material into the cell's own DNA without destroying the cell or replicating itself. This integration can lead to long-term effects on the cell's behavior and potentially alter the cell's hereditary material.
When a virus enters the lysogenic phase, it integrates its genetic material into the host's DNA and remains dormant. The virus replicates along with the host cell during cell division. This phase allows the virus to evade detection by the immune system and can later switch to the lytic phase to produce new viruses.
When a virus enters a cell, it injects its genetic material into the cell. The virus then hijacks the cell’s machinery to replicate itself, producing more virus particles. This process can ultimately lead to cell death and the spread of the virus to other cells in the body.
Once the virus enters the cell, unless it is deformed in some way, it will have success.
the virus is integrate inti the DNA of the host cell and is latent.