Understanding Viral Life Cycles and Replication

Practice Questions

GRE Subject Test: Biology › Understanding Viral Life Cycles and Replication

Questions
5
1

Which of the following structures will never be found in a virus?

2

Which of the following is not part of the lysogenic cycle?

3

Which of the following is not true of retroviruses?

4

A mad scientist is working with a rare retrovirus under the hood, when he accidentally spills the viral sample over three live tissue cultures. Assuming the cultures were composed of stem cells, epithelial cells, and muscle cells, in which sample would the mad scientist expect to find the lowest viral titer?

5

Prions are the suspected cause of a wide variety of neurodegenerative diseases in mammals. According to prevailing theory, prions are infectious particles made only of protein and found in high concentrations in the brains of infected animals. All mammals produce normal prion protein, PrPC, a transmembrane protein whose function remains unclear.

Infectious prions, PrPRes, induce conformational changes in the existing PrPC proteins according to the following reaction:

PrPC + PrPRes → PrPRes + PrPRes

The PrPRes is then suspected to accumulate in the nervous tissue of infected patients and cause disease. This model of transmission generates replicated proteins, but does so bypassing the standard model of the central dogma of molecular biology. Transcription and translation apparently do not play a role in this replication process.

This theory is a major departure from previously established biological dogma. A scientist decides to test the protein-only theory of prion propagation. He establishes his experiment as follows:

Homogenized brain matter of infected rabbits is injected into the brains of healthy rabbits, as per the following table:

Rabbit 1 and 2: injected with normal saline on days 1 and 2

The above trials serve as controls.

Rabbit 3 and 4: injected with homogenized brain matter on days 1 and 2

The above trials use unmodified brain matter.

Rabbit 5 and 6: injected with irradiated homogenized brain matter on days 1 and 2

The above trials use brain matter that has been irradiated to destroy nucleic acids in the homogenate.

Rabbit 7 and 8: injected with protein-free centrifuged homogenized brain matter on days 1 and 2

The above trials use brain matter that has been centrifuged to generate a protein-free homogenate and a protein-rich homogenate based on molecular weight.

Rabbit 9 and 10: injected with boiled homogenized brain matter on days 1 and 2

The above trials use brain matter that have been boiled to destroy any bacterial contaminants in the homogenate.

Some scientists argue that there must be a virus or bacterium that cause infectious diseases, and claim that there is likely a heretofore undiscovered microbe causing neurodegeneration that most scientists claim are caused by PrPRes. What is a key way for these scientists to distinguish viruses from bacteria?

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