100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Exam (elaborations)

Test Bank Complete_ Fundamentals Of Molecular Virology 3rd Edition, (2025) By Christopher D. Richardson & Nicholas H. Acheson All Chapters 1-42| 11 Sections| Latest Edition With Verified Answers| Rated A+

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
444
Grade
A+
Uploaded on
08-07-2025
Written in
2024/2025

This document contains the full test bank for Fundamentals of Molecular Virology (3rd Edition, 2025) by Christopher D. Richardson and Nicholas H. Acheson. Spanning all 42 chapters across 11 sections, it includes updated and verified answers for each question. Ideal for students in molecular biology and virology, this A+ rated resource is tailored for effective exam preparation and in-depth virus-related concept review.

Show more Read less
Institution
Fundamentals Of Molecular Virology
Course
Fundamentals Of Molecular Virology













Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
Fundamentals Of Molecular Virology
Course
Fundamentals Of Molecular Virology

Document information

Uploaded on
July 8, 2025
Number of pages
444
Written in
2024/2025
Type
Exam (elaborations)
Contains
Questions & answers

Subjects

  • virology exam preparation

Content preview

Test Bank Complete_
Fundamentals Of Molecular Virology 3rd Edition, (2025)
By Christopher D. Richardson & Nicholas H. Acheson
All Chapters 1-42| 11 Sections| Latest Edition With Verified Answers| Rated A+




section 1: introduction to virology ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 4

, chapter 1: introduction to virology -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 4
chapter 2: virus structure and assembly ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 20
chapter 3: virus classification: the world of viruses ---------------------------------------------------------------- 29
chapter 4: virus entry ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 37
section 2: viruses of bacteria and archaea ------------------------------------------------------------------ 47
chapter 5: single-stranded rna bacteriophages --------------------------------------------------------------------- 47
chapter 6: microviruses ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 56
chapter 7: bacteriophage t7 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 65
chapter 8: bacteriophage t4 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 75
chapter 9: bacteriophage lambda --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 91
chapter 10: viruses of archaea ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 100
section 3: positive‐strand rna animal viruses ------------------------------------------------------------- 109
chapter 11: picornaviruses ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 109
chapter 12: flaviviruses -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 119
chapter 13: hepaciviruses ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 128
chapter 14: togaviruses and rubella virus--------------------------------------------------------------------------- 144
chapter 15: coronaviruses ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 154
section 4: negative‐strand and double‐stranded rna animal viruses ------------------------------- 162
chapter 16: paramyxoviruses and pneumoviruses --------------------------------------------------------------- 162
chapter 17: rhabdoviruses ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 172
chapter 18: filoviruses ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 181
chapter 19: bunyaviruses ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 189
chapter 20: influenza viruses ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 198
chapter 21: reoviruses---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 208
section 5: section v: small dna animal viruses ------------------------------------------------------------ 218
chapter 22: parvoviruses ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 218
chapter 23: polyomaviruses -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 228
chapter 24: papillomaviruses------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 238
section 6: section vi: large dna animal viruses ------------------------------------------------------------ 247
chapter 25: adenoviruses------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 247
chapter 26: herpesviruses ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 257

, chapter 27: poxviruses --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 268
section 7: viruses with a reverse transcriptase ----------------------------------------------------------- 278
chapter 28: retroviruses ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 278
chapter 29: human immunodeficiency virus ----------------------------------------------------------------------- 288
chapter 30: hepadnaviruses -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 298
section 8: viroids and prions ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 308
chapter 31: viroids and hepatitis delta virus ----------------------------------------------------------------------- 308
chapter 32: prions --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 317
section 9: viruses of plants, algae, and invertebrates--------------------------------------------------- 327
chapter 33: cucumber mosaic virus----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 327
chapter 34: viruses of algae and mimivirus, a giant virus ------------------------------------------------------ 336
chapter 35: baculoviruses ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 346
chapter 36: viruses of invertebrates---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 356
section 10: host defenses against virus infection -------------------------------------------------------- 372
chapter 37: innate immune responses against virus infection ------------------------------------------------ 372
chapter 38: adaptive immune responses to virus infection---------------------------------------------------- 381
section 11: medical applications of virology -------------------------------------------------------------- 390
chapter 39: antiviral vaccines ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 390
chapter 40: antiviral chemotherapy ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 400
chapter 41: oncolytic viruses ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 410
chapter 42: virus‐mediated gene therapy -------------------------------------------------------------------------- 426

,Section 1: introduction to virology
Chapter 1: introduction to virology
christopher d. Richardson: fundamentals of molecular virology 3rd edition, (2025) test bank



Question type: multiple choice


1. What distinguishes a virus from all other microorganisms?
A) ability to reproduce independently
B) presence of a nucleus
C) dependence on host cell machinery for replication
D) ability to metabolize nutrients
E) double-stranded dna genome


ans: c
Viruses are obligate intracellular parasites—they lack the metabolic machinery needed
for self-replication and must hijack a host cell’s processes to reproduce.


2. Which component is not present in all viruses?
A) nucleic acid
B) protein capsid
C) lipid envelope
D) genetic information
E) none of the above


ans: c
All viruses have genetic material and a protein capsid, but not all have a lipid envelope.
Envelopes are acquired from host membranes and are present only in enveloped viruses.


3. The smallest known viruses are approximately what size?
A) 1 μm

,B) 300 nm
C) 20 nm
D) 1000 nm
E) 5 μm


ans: c
The smallest viruses, such as parvoviruses, can be as small as 20 nm in diameter—far
smaller than most bacteria.


4. The baltimore classification system is based on:
A) host range
B) capsid shape
C) genome type and replication strategy
D) envelope presence
E) disease symptoms


ans: c
The baltimore system groups viruses into seven classes based on the type of nucleic acid
they carry and how they replicate and produce mrna.


5. Which class of viruses must carry their own rna-dependent rna polymerase?
A) double-stranded dna viruses
B) single-stranded (+) rna viruses
C) retroviruses
D) double-stranded rna viruses
E) satellite viruses


ans: d
Dsrna viruses must carry rna-dependent rna polymerase because host cells do not have
enzymes to transcribe dsrna into mrna.

, 6. Which of the following statements best defines a virion?
A) the genome of a virus
B) a virus that has infected a host
C) the complete, infectious virus particle
D) a non-infectious viral fragment
E) the rna segment of a virus


ans: c
A virion is the fully assembled, infectious form of a virus outside a host cell, typically
including the genome, capsid, and sometimes envelope.


7. Viral envelopes are derived from which of the following?
A) viral ribosomes
B) host cell membranes
C) bacterial capsules
D) viral dna
E) host cytoplasm


ans: b
Enveloped viruses acquire their lipid membranes from host cell membranes during
budding (either plasma or organelle membranes).


8. The term "nucleocapsid" refers to:
A) viral dna only
B) capsid and envelope
C) capsid proteins only
D) genome plus capsid
E) rna plus envelope


ans: d

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
solutiontestbank011 Harvard University
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
392
Member since
3 year
Number of followers
158
Documents
937
Last sold
1 day ago
solutiontestbank011 – Your Ultimate Source for Nursing Success

Welcome to NURSEEDITHCAVELL, your go-to source for high-quality nursing documents, test banks, study guides, and clinical resources — crafted with precision, care, and a commitment to your success in nursing school and beyond.

3.5

43 reviews

5
17
4
7
3
9
2
2
1
8

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions