Describe the difference between the two viral replication cycles. What will this lab simulate? List at least three safety rules that you will need to follow during this lab. What c... Describe the difference between the two viral replication cycles. What will this lab simulate? List at least three safety rules that you will need to follow during this lab. What color will the cup turn if someone is infected? Research Question: What did you want to research in this lab? Hypothesis: Restate your hypothesis from your Science Journal. Experiment: Summarize the steps of the experiment you performed, as if you were explaining to someone who did not perform the experiment. Parts of the Simulation: This lab simulated the spread of an infectious disease. What are at least 3 disease transmission methods that each "interaction" event could have represented? How might the spread of diseases transmitted through the air differ from the spread of diseases that depend on person-to-person contact? Describe at least 3 ways you can prevent the spread of an infectious disease. Conclusion: Who do you think was patient zero in our class simulation? Explain your reasoning. Was your hypothesis supported by the data? Why or why not? Why do viruses rely on a host to survive?
Understand the Problem
The question is asking for a detailed explanation of a lab experiment that simulates the spread of an infectious disease, focusing on the differences between the lytic and lysogenic cycles of viral replication, as well as procedural details such as safety rules, hypotheses, data recording, and analysis of results.
Answer
Viral cycles differ: lytic destroys cells, lysogenic integrates DNA. Follow lab safety: wear gloves, use disinfectants, don't share materials. Infected cup turns color. Hypothesis and simulation details vary.
Lytic and lysogenic are two viral replication cycles. Lytic results in host cell destruction, lysogenic integrates virus DNA into host DNA. In the lab simulating infection spread, follow safety rules like wearing gloves, using disinfectants, and not sharing materials. The cup changes color when infected. The hypothesis and experiment details vary individually.
Answer for screen readers
Lytic and lysogenic are two viral replication cycles. Lytic results in host cell destruction, lysogenic integrates virus DNA into host DNA. In the lab simulating infection spread, follow safety rules like wearing gloves, using disinfectants, and not sharing materials. The cup changes color when infected. The hypothesis and experiment details vary individually.
More Information
Lytic cycle quickly takes over a host, leading to cell death and virus spread, while lysogenic allows virus DNA to remain dormant, activating later.
Tips
Avoid confusing the two cycles; remember lytic is destructive and lysogenic is dormant.
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