When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Viroid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viroid

    Viroids are extremely small, from 246 to 467 nucleotides, smaller than other infectious plant pathogens; they thus consist of fewer than 10,000 atoms. In comparison, the genomes of the smallest known viruses capable of causing an infection by themselves are around 2,000 nucleotides long.

  3. Virus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virus

    In general, viruses are much smaller than bacteria and more than a thousand bacteriophage viruses would fit inside an Escherichia coli bacterium's cell. [39]: 98 Many viruses that have been studied are spherical and have a diameter between 20 and 300 nanometres.

  4. History of virology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_virology

    The sizes of viruses determined using this new microscope fitted in well with those estimated by filtration experiments. Viruses were expected to be small, but the range of sizes came as a surprise. Some were only a little smaller than the smallest known bacteria, and the smaller viruses were of similar sizes to complex organic molecules. [14]

  5. Smallest organisms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smallest_organisms

    With a size of approximately 200 to 300 nm, M. genitalium is an ultramicrobacterium, smaller than other small bacteria, including rickettsia and chlamydia. However, the vast majority of bacterial strains have not been studied, and the marine ultramicrobacterium Sphingomonas sp. strain RB2256 is reported to have passed through a 220 nm (0.00022 ...

  6. Microviridae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microviridae

    Viruses are assigned according to their similarity to known lab based strains—the ΦX174-like clade, G4-like clade and the α3-like clade. The ΦX174-like clade of microviridae have the smallest and least variable genomes (5,386–5,387 bp); the G4-like clade varies in size from 5,486 to 5,487 bp; while the largest genome sized group is the ...

  7. Introduction to viruses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Introduction_to_viruses

    At the same time, several other scientists showed that, although these agents (later called viruses) were different from bacteria and about one hundred times smaller, they could still cause disease. In 1899, Dutch microbiologist Martinus Beijerinck observed that the agent only multiplied when in dividing cells.

  8. Portal:Viruses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Viruses

    Viruses are small infectious agents that can replicate only inside the living cells of an organism. Viruses infect all forms of life, including animals , plants , fungi , bacteria and archaea . They are found in almost every ecosystem on Earth and are the most abundant type of biological entity, with millions of different types, although only ...

  9. Virology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virology

    Thousands of different viruses are now known about and virologists often specialize in either the viruses that infect plants, or bacteria and other microorganisms, or animals. Viruses that infect humans are now studied by medical virologists. Virology is a broad subject covering biology, health, animal welfare, agriculture and ecology.