A lysogenic cycle is like when a tiny virus takes a vacation inside a cell and comes back later to play.
Imagine you have a favorite toy box, that’s like a bacteria cell. One day, a little virus sneaks in and hides inside the toy box instead of playing right away. It doesn’t bother your toys or make a mess. That’s the lysogenic cycle: the virus is hiding out in the cell without causing trouble.
The Virus Takes a Nap
The virus stays quiet for a while, just like when you take a nap after lunch. It copies itself along with the cell as it grows and divides, so every new toy box (or new cell) gets a little copy of the virus too.
When the Virus Wakes Up
Later on, something might happen to make the virus wake up, maybe another toy falls in, or you shake the box. Then the virus decides it’s time for fun! It makes the cell burst open and creates lots of new viruses to go out and play with other cells.
So a lysogenic cycle is like a virus taking a nap inside a cell, hiding until it's ready to come back and make more friends (or trouble)!
Examples
- Like a sleeper agent, the virus waits until the host cell divides before taking over.
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See also
- How does our immune system fight off viruses and bacteria?
- What is prophage?
- What are influenza a viruses?
- How Does Movement of virus in human body Work?
- How A Virus Spreads?