How do viruses take control?
Viruses
Influenza A
100

How do viruses exit our cells?

By telling the cell to quietly self-destruct, or by pinching off parts of the cell membrane as "shields" and going to infect more civilian cells. 

100

Why can viruses become more deadly or weaker without predictability?

Because to reproduce so fast, they don't have any of the intricate safeguards we do to make sure there isn't anything wrong with any of our cells; so viruses mutate all the time. 

100
How does Influenza A, like most viruses, enter the body?

Through the respiratory system.

200

How do viruses enter our cells?

By manipulating our cells with their spike proteins to pull them safely inside.

200

How do we know that viruses' main strategy can never be fully defended against?

Because it goes directly for a fundamental natural part of our cells. 

200

How many major epidemics has Influenza A caused?

4, the most famous killing 40 million.

300

How do viruses take over our cells?

They generally transfer their genetic material to the cell and order it to become a virus factory.

300
How many viruses exist currently?

An estimated 10^31, making them the most successful. 

300

How many viruses need to enter your lungs?

Just one.

400

ow do different viruses use up the cell's resources?

Some viruses use them all in one go, others keep the cell alive as long as possible as a virus factory.

400

What is the viruses' superpower?

Nothing multiplies as fast as they do.

400

How many cells can a single infected cell produce?

22.

500

About how many different species of viruses affect us?

Only 200 of the trillions of viruses out there infect humans. 

500

How long would it take for the virus to properly take over your system?

It takes about half a day, or just 5 reproductive cycles for one virus to turn into millions.