The shorter replication cycle a virus goes through that causes the host cell to burst.
What is the lytic cycle?
The disease caused by the body not distinguishing self from nonself.
What is an autoimmune diesease?
Bacteria are prokaryotes or eukaryotes?
What are prokaryotes?
The structure that amoebas use for movement.
What are Pseudopods?
The eukaryotic heterotrophs with rigid cell walls and no chlorophyll.
What are fungi?
The makeup of the capsid.
What are proteins?
An unknown disease that has presented itself.
What is an emerging disease?
How antibiotics help in the fight against bacteria.
What is treatment?
The process in which protists exchange genetic information.
What is conjugation?
The long branching filaments below the soil.
What are hyphae?
What we use to prevent viruses.
What is a vaccine?
The particle that attaches to a specific antigen
What is an antibody?
The hair like structures used for attachment and some locomotion.
What are pili?
The relationship between a protist and a host where they both benefit.
What is a mutualistic relationship?
The body of the mushroom.
What is the fruiting body?
The term used when the viral DNA is integrated with the host DNA during the lysogenic cycle.
What is prophage?
Proteins that fight viral growth.
What is an interferon?
The replication process that ends with two identical cells.
What is binary fission?
The short structures that move like oars on protists.
What are cillia?
The makeup of the cell wall of fungi.
What is chitin?
The virus that infects a bacteria.
What is a bacteriophage?
The enzyme in tears that breaks down bacterial cell walls.
What are lysozymes?
Bacteria that can survive with or without the presence of oxygen.
What is facultative?
The means of using water, air, and other animals for movement.
What is passive movement?
A symbiotic association between multicellular fungus, and yeast, and a photosynthetic organism.
What is a lichen?