Section on viruses and series of detailed articles about viruses.
Viruses are one of the smallest known types of infectious agent. It is debatable whether viruses are truly living organisms or just collections of molecules capable of self-replication under specific conditions. Their sole activity is to invade the cells of other organisms, which they then take over to make copies of themselves. Outside living cells, viruses are inert.
Structure
A single virus particle (virion) consists of an inner core of nucleic acid, which may be either DNA or RNA, surrounded by one or two protective protein shells (capsids). Surrounding the outer capsid may be another layer, the viral envelope, which consists mainly of protein. The nucleic acid consists of a string of genes that contain coded instructions for making copies of the virus.
Articles:
- Alphaviruses
- Bunyaviridae
- Colorado tick fever and other arthropod borne Reoviruses
- Dengue
- Filoviruses - Ebola and Marburg Viruses
- Flaviviruses excluding Dengue
- Herpes simplex
- Herpes zoster
- HIV
- Measles
- Respiratory tract viruses
- Rhabdoviruses - Rabies and rabies-related Lyssaviruses
- Rubella
- Viral infections of the central nervous system