Viruses are pathogenic organisms of very small dimension, invisible to optical microscopes. They can’t multiply themselves out of a living cell, they are obligatory parasites.
Definition of a virusIt’s in 1953 that Lwoff has defined the concept of a virion. It’s a viral particle which is mature and infectious, and free in the environment. A virion has 4 essential characters :
A plant virus, or phytovirus, is defined as an obligatory parasite of living cells in a host plant. Those pathogenic organisms are multiplied by the contaminated plant cells. They generally induce metabolic disorders leading to the expression of symptoms (viral diseases). The infection of a crop by a virus implies that it is introduced in a living host cell virus through a wound, from protoplasm to protoplasm or through the intermediary of a living organism called vector. Anatomy of a virusAny viral particle is made of at least two recurrent and obligatory elements :
The interactions between the nucleic acid and the protein of the capside are very close. The nucleoprotein structure defined by the nucleic acid and the internal proteins is called nucleoid and the group nucleoid and capsid constitute a functional unity which is called nucleocapsid. The viruses limited to their nucleocapsid are called nude viruses. In some viral families, the nucleocapsid is surrounded by a peripheral optional structure called the envelope. The dimension and shape of plant viruses vary considerably. However, each particular virus presents particles with constant characteristics. So, the classification of viruses is partially based on the dimensions and the morphology of virions observed through an electronic microscope. The viral particles present isometric or spherical shapes, shapes of small rigid sticks or filamentous shapes. Return to the page " Viruses and viroids : the world of the invisible" |








