Capsid
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- A capsid is also a leaf bug of the family Miridae.
A capsid is the outer shell of a virus. It consists of several monomeric subunits made of protein. The capsid serves three main purposes :
- It protects the genetic material of the virus.
- It determines if a cell is suitable for infection.
- It starts the actual infection by attaching and "opening" the target cell and injecting the genetic material of the virus into the cell.
Once the virus has infected the cell, it will sooner or later start replicating itself, using the "infrastructure" of the infected cell. During this process, the capsid subunits are synthesized according to the genetic material of the virus, using the protein biosynthesis mechanism of the cell. Some viruses will also take a portion of the host cell's cell membrane with them when they depart, enclosing the proteinaceous capsid with viral proteins projecting through it.
The majority of viruses come in three different structures; helical capsids, icosahedral (isometric) capsids, or enveloped. In helical symmetry, the protein subunits are arranged around the circumference of a circle to form a disk. In icosahedral symmetry, the subunits form a quasi-spherical structure. In enveloped viruses, the protein subunits are exposed to the external environment.
Structural analyses of major capsid protein (MCP) architectures have been used to categorise viruses into families. For example, the bacteriophage PRD1, Paramecium bursaria Chlorella algal virus, and mammalian adenovirus have been placed in the same family. Khayat et al. classified Sulfolobus turreted icosahedral virus (STIV) and Laurinmäki et al. classified bacteriophage Bam35 - Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 103, 3669 (2006); 102, 18944 (2005); Structure 13, 1819 (2005)
[edit] External links
- [1] from the All the virology on the www website.
we learned this in biology by:derrick mullins