3.6 FREQUENCY OF OCCURRENCE OF DIFFERENT VIRUS PARTICLE MORPHOLOGIES

The different virus morphologies discussed above do not occur with equal frequency among animal, plant and bacterial viruses (Table 3.3). There are relatively few purely icosahedral viruses in bacteria (see Appendix 4); nonenveloped helical viruses are common and occur almost exclusively in plants; enveloped icosahedral viruses and enveloped helical viruses are common in animals and rare in plants and bacteria. Finally head–tail virus morphology, in which an isometric head and a helical tail are joined together, is found only in bacteria. Unfortunately there is no real explanation as to why there should be these restrictions. There also exist some very large, very complex viruses (e.g. poxviruses of animals and mimivirus of amoebae: see Appendix) whose morphogenesis is beyond our current comprehension


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

4.3 CLASSIFICATION ON THE BASIS OF VIRUS PARTICLE MORPHOLOGY

3.4 ENVELOPED (MEMBRANE-BOUND) VIRUS PARTICLES

1.8 PROPERTIES OF VIRUSES