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Virus nanotechnology is the use of viruses as a source of nanoparticles for biomedical purposes. Viruses are made up of a genome and a capsid; and some viruses are enveloped. Most virus capsids measure between 20-500 nm in diameter. Because of their nanometer size dimensions, viruses have been considered as naturally occurring nanoparticles.
Viruses using both DNA and RNA in their replication (retroviruses) range in size from 7,040 to 12,195 nucleotides. [15] The smallest double-stranded DNA viruses are the hepadnaviruses such as hepatitis B , at 3.2 kb and 42 nm (4.2 × 10 −5 mm); parvoviruses have smaller capsids, at 18–26 nm (1.8 × 10 −5 –2.6 × 10 −5 mm), but larger ...
50 nm – upper size for airborne virus particles; 50 nm – flying height of the head of a hard disk [77] 65 nm – the average half-pitch of a memory cell manufactured circa 2005–2006; 58 nm – height of a T7 bacteriophage; 90 nm – human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) (generally, viruses range in size from 20 nm to 450 nm)
They are among the smallest viruses, with diameters of about 30 nanometers. By comparison, other viruses, such as smallpox and vaccinia , are around ten times larger at about 300 nanometers , while influenza viruses are around 80–120 nm.
Viruses are assigned according to their similarity to known lab based strains—the ΦX174-like clade, G4-like clade and the α3-like clade. The ΦX174-like clade of microviridae have the smallest and least variable genomes (5,386–5,387 bp); the G4-like clade varies in size from 5,486 to 5,487 bp; while the largest genome sized group is the ...
The influenza A virus has a negative-sense, single-stranded, segmented RNA genome, enclosed in a lipid envelope. The virus particle (also called the "virion") is 80–120 nanometers in diameter, such that the smallest virions adopt an elliptical shape; larger virions have a filamentous shape. [30]
Size Reference Flatworm animal: Eucestoda: Tapeworm: length (maximum) 25 m: Eucestoda: Nematode animal: Loa loa: Loa loa: length (female) 20–70 mm: Loa loa: Arthropod animal: Cymothoa exigua: Tongue-eating louse: length (female) 8–29 mm: Cymothoa exigua: Nematode animal: Enterobius: Pinworm: length (female) 8–13 mm: Pinworm (parasite ...
While the exact criteria as defined in the scientific literature vary, giant viruses are generally described as viruses having large, pseudo-icosahedral capsids (200 to 400 nanometers in diameter) [4] that may be surrounded by a thick (approximately 100 nm) layer of filamentous protein fibers. The viruses have large, double-stranded DNA genomes ...