Viral Particle Replication (AQA AS Biology): Revision Note
Exam code: 7401
Division of viral particles
Viruses are acellular infectious particles
Being non-living, viruses do not undergo cell division
Viruses are relatively simple in structure with:
A nucleic acid core (their genomes are either DNA or RNA, and can be single or double-stranded)
A protein coat known as a ‘capsid’
Some viruses have an outer layer known as an ‘envelope’ formed usually from the membrane-phospholipids of a cell they were made in

Viral replication
Viruses are non-living and parasitic - they can only replicate inside host cells
Replication process:
Attachment proteins bind to complementary receptors on host cell surface
Viral DNA or RNA is injected into the host cell
Host cell uses its own enzymes and ribosomes to synthesise viral proteins and nucleic acids
New viral particles are assembled
Viruses are released by
cell lysis (bursting)
budding (takes host membrane – forms viral envelope)
Virus release damages or destroys host cells, causing disease
Unit 2: Cell structure provides details of how HIV replication occurs by this process


Examiner Tips and Tricks
Different viruses have different attachment proteins and therefore can only bind to specific host cell types that have the correct (complementary) receptor proteins.
For example, some viruses use prokaryotic host cells, whilst others use eukaryotic animal or plant host cells.
In addition, some viruses can only infect one specific cell type, whereas others can infect many different cell types.
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