Quote:
	
	
		
			
				
					Originally Posted by  royamcr
					 
				 
				How are viruses not living when they can be killed by uv light and disinfectants? 
			
		 | 
	
	
 
answer - from Scientific American
 - Comment - perhaps it is human endeavor and our difficulty with "defining life".
Are Viruses Alive?
Although viruses challenge our concept of what "living" means, they are vital members of the web of life
https://www.scientificamerican.com/a...es-alive-2004/
In an episode of the classic 1950s television comedy 
The Honeymooners,  Brooklyn bus driver Ralph Kramden loudly explains to his wife, Alice,  “You know that I know how easy you get the virus.” Half a century ago  even regular folks like the Kramdens had some knowledge of viruses—as  microscopic bringers of disease. Yet it is almost certain that they did  not know exactly what a virus was. They were, and are, not alone.
  For about 100 years, the scientifi c community has repeatedly changed  its collective mind over what viruses are. First seen as poisons, then  as life-forms, then biological chemicals, viruses today are thought of  as being in a gray area between living and nonliving: they cannot  replicate on their own but can do so in truly living cells and can also  affect the behavior of their hosts profoundly. The categorization of  viruses as nonliving during much of the modern era of biological science  has had an unintended consequence: it has led most researchers to  ignore viruses in the study of evolution. Finally, however, scientists  are beginning to appreciate viruses as fundamental players in the  history of life.
  
Coming to Terms
It is easy to see why viruses have been diffi cult to pigeonhole. They  seem to vary with each lens applied to examine them. The initial  interest in viruses stemmed from their association with diseases—the  word “virus” has its roots in the Latin term for “poison.” In the late  19th century researchers realized that certain diseases, including  rabies and foot-and-mouth, were caused by particles that seemed to  behave like bacteria but were much smaller. Because they were clearly  biological themselves and could be spread from one victim to another  with obvious biological effects, viruses were then thought to be the  simplest of all living, gene-bearing life-forms.
  Their demotion to inert chemicals came after 1935, when Wendell M.  Stanley and his colleagues, at what is now the Rockefeller University in  New York City, crystallized a virus— tobacco mosaic virus—for the fi  rst time. They saw that it consisted of a package of complex  biochemicals. But it lacked essential systems necessary for metabolic  functions, the biochemical activity of life. Stanley shared the 1946  Nobel Prize— in chemistry, not in physiology or medicine—for this work.
  Further research by Stanley and others established that a virus  consists of nucleic acids (DNA or RNA) enclosed in a protein coat that  may also shelter viral proteins involved in infection. By that  description, a virus seems more like a chemistry set than an organism.  But when a virus enters a cell (called a host after infection), it is  far from inactive. It sheds its coat, bares its genes and induces the  cell’s own replication machinery to reproduce the intruder’s DNA or RNA  and manufacture more viral protein based on the instructions in the  viral nucleic acid. The newly created viral bits assemble and, voilà,  more virus arises, which also may infect other cells.
  These behaviors are what led many to think of viruses as existing at  the border between chemistry and life. More poetically, virologists Marc  H. V. van Regenmortel of the University of Strasbourg in France and  Brian W. J. Mahy of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have  recently said that with their dependence on host cells, viruses lead “a  kind of borrowed life.” Interestingly, even though biologists long  favored the view that viruses were mere boxes of chemicals, they took  advantage of viral activity in host cells to determine how nucleic acids  code for proteins: indeed, modern molecular biology rests on a  foundation of information gained through viruses.
  Molecular biologists went on to crystallize most of the essential  components of cells and are today accustomed to thinking about cellular  constituents—for example, ribosomes, mitochondria, membranes, DNA and  proteins—as either chemical machinery or the stuff that the machinery  uses or produces. This exposure to multiple complex chemical structures  that carry out the processes of life is probably a reason that most  molecular biologists do not spend a lot of time puzzling over whether  viruses are alive. For them, that exercise might seem equivalent to  pondering whether those individual subcellular constituents are alive on  their own. This myopic view allows them to see only how viruses co-opt  cells or cause disease. The more sweeping question of viral  contributions to the history of life on earth, which I will address  shortly, remains for the most part unanswered and even unasked.
  
To Be or Not to Be
The seemingly simple question of whether or not viruses are alive, which  my students often ask, has probably defi ed a simple answer all these  years because it raises a fundamental issue: What exactly defi nes  “life?” A precise scientifi c defi nition of life is an elusive thing,  but most observers would agree that life includes certain qualities in  addition to an ability to replicate. For example, a living entity is in a  state bounded by birth and death. Living organisms also are thought to  require a degree of biochemical autonomy, carrying on the metabolic  activities that produce the molecules and energy needed to sustain the  organism. This level of autonomy is essential to most definitions.
  Viruses, however, parasitize essentially all biomolecular aspects of  life. That is, they depend on the host cell for the raw materials and  energy necessary for nucleic acid synthesis, protein synthesis,  processing and transport, and all other biochemical activities that  allow the virus to multiply and spread. One might then conclude that  even though these processes come under viral direction, viruses are  simply nonliving parasites of living metabolic systems. But a spectrum  may exist between what is certainly alive and what is not.
  A rock is not alive. A metabolically active sack, devoid of genetic  material and the potential for propagation, is also not alive. A  bacterium, though, is alive. Although it is a single cell, it can  generate energy and the molecules needed to sustain itself, and it can  reproduce. But what about a seed? A seed might not be considered alive.  Yet it has a potential for life, and it may be destroyed. In this  regard, viruses resemble seeds more than they do live cells. They have a  certain potential, which can be snuffed out, but they do not attain the  more autonomous state of life.
  
 
  Sign up for 
Scientific American’s free newsletters.
 
  
 
   Another way to think about life is as an emergent property of a  collection of certain nonliving things. Both life and consciousness are  examples of emergent complex systems. They each require a critical level  of complexity or interaction to achieve their respective states. A  neuron by itself, or even in a network of nerves, is not conscious—whole  brain complexity is needed. Yet even an intact human brain can be  biologically alive but incapable of consciousness, or “brain-dead.”  Similarly, neither cellular nor viral individual genes or proteins are  by themselves alive. The enucleated cell is akin to the state of being  braindead, in that it lacks a full critical complexity. A virus, too,  fails to reach a critical complexity. So life itself is an emergent,  complex state, but it is made from the same fundamental, physical  building blocks that constitute a virus. Approached from this  perspective, viruses, though not fully alive, may be thought of as being  more than inert matter: they verge on life.
  In fact, in October, French researchers announced fi ndings that  illustrate afresh just how close some viruses might come. Didier Raoult  and his colleagues at the University of the Mediterranean in Marseille  announced that they had sequenced the genome of the largest known virus,  Mimivirus, which was discovered in 1992. The virus, about the same size  as a small bacterium, infects amoebae. Sequence analysis of the virus  revealed numerous genes previously thought to exist only in cellular  organisms. Some of these genes are involved in making the proteins  encoded by the viral DNA and may make it easier for Mimivirus to co-opt  host cell replication systems. As the research team noted in its report  in the journal 
Science, the enormous complexity of the  Mimivirus’s genetic complement “challenges the established frontier  between viruses and parasitic cellular organisms.”
  
Impact on Evolution 
Debates over whether to label viruses as living lead naturally to  another question: Is pondering the status of viruses as living or  nonliving more than a philosophical exercise, the basis of a lively and  heated rhetorical debate but with little real consequence? I think the  issue 
is important, because how scientists regard this question infl uences their thinking about the mechanisms of evolution.
  Viruses have their own, ancient evolutionary history, dating to the  very origin of cellular life. For example, some viral- repair  enzymes—which excise and resynthesize damaged DNA, mend oxygen radical  damage, and so on— are unique to certain viruses and have existed almost  unchanged probably for billions of years.
  Nevertheless, most evolutionary biologists hold that because viruses  are not alive, they are unworthy of serious consideration when trying to  understand evolution. They also look on viruses as coming from host  genes that somehow escaped the host and acquired a protein coat. In this  view, viruses are fugitive host genes that have degenerated into  parasites. And with viruses thus dismissed from the web of life,  important contributions they may have made to the origin of species and  the maintenance of life may go unrecognized. (Indeed, only four of the  1,205 pages of the 2002 volume 
The Encyclopedia of Evolution are devoted to viruses.)
  Of course, evolutionary biologists do not deny that viruses have had  some role in evolution. But by viewing viruses as inanimate, these  investigators place them in the same category of infl uences as, say,  climate change. Such external infl uences select among individuals  having varied, genetically controlled traits; those individuals most  able to survive and thrive when faced with these challenges go on to  reproduce most successfully and hence spread their genes to future  generations.
  But viruses directly exchange genetic information with living  organisms—that is, within the web of life itself. A possible surprise to  most physicians, and perhaps to most evolutionary biologists as well,  is that most known viruses are persistent and innocuous, not pathogenic.  They take up residence in cells, where they may remain dormant for long  periods or take advantage of the cells’ replication apparatus to  reproduce at a slow and steady rate. These viruses have developed many  clever ways to avoid detection by the host immune system— essentially  every step in the immune process can be altered or controlled by various  genes found in one virus or another.
  Furthermore, a virus genome (the entire complement of DNA or RNA) can  permanently colonize its host, adding viral genes to host lineages and  ultimately becoming a critical part of the host species’ genome. Viruses  therefore surely have effects that are faster and more direct than  those of external forces that simply select among more slowly generated,  internal genetic variations. The huge population of viruses, combined  with their rapid rates of replication and mutation, makes them the  world’s leading source of genetic innovation: they constantly “invent”  new genes. And unique genes of viral origin may travel, finding their  way into other organisms and contributing to evolutionary change.
  Data published by the International Human Genome Sequencing  Consortium indicate that somewhere between 113 and 223 genes present in  bacteria and in the human genome are absent in well-studied  organisms—such as the yeast 
Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the fruit fly 
Drosophila melanogaster and the nematode 
Caenorhabditis elegans—that  lie in between those two evolutionary extremes. Some researchers  thought that these organisms, which arose after bacteria but before  vertebrates, simply lost the genes in question at some point in their  evolutionary history. Others suggested that these genes had been  transferred directly to the human lineage by invading bacteria.
  My colleague Victor DeFilippis of the Vaccine and Gene Therapy  Institute of the Oregon Health and Science University and I suggested a  third alternative: viruses may originate genes, then colonize two  different lineages—for example, bacteria and vertebrates. A gene  apparently bestowed on humanity by bacteria may have been given to both  by a virus.
  In fact, along with other researchers, Philip Bell of Macquarie  University in Sydney, Australia, and I contend that the cell nucleus  itself is of viral origin. The advent of the nucleus— which  differentiates eukaryotes (organisms whose cells contain a true  nucleus), including humans, from prokaryotes, such as bacteria—cannot be  satisfactorily explained solely by the gradual adaptation of  prokaryotic cells until they became eukaryotic. Rather the nucleus may  have evolved from a persisting large DNA virus that made a permanent  home within prokaryotes. Some support for this idea comes from sequence  data showing that the gene for a DNA polymerase (a DNAcopying enzyme) in  the virus called T4, which infects bacteria, is closely related to  other DNA polymerase genes in both eukaryotes and the viruses that  infect them. Patrick Forterre of the University of Paris-Sud has also  analyzed enzymes responsible for DNA replication and has concluded that  the genes for such enzymes in eukaryotes probably have a viral origin.
  From single-celled organisms to human populations, viruses affect all  life on earth, often determining what will survive. But viruses  themselves also evolve. New viruses, such as the AIDS-causing HIV-1, may  be the only biological entities that researchers can actually witness  come into being, providing a real-time example of evolution in action.
  Viruses matter to life. They are the constantly changing boundary  between the worlds of biology and biochemistry. As we continue to  unravel the genomes of more and more organisms, the contributions from  this dynamic and ancient gene pool should become apparent. Nobel  laureate Salvador Luria mused about the viral infl uence on evolution in  1959. “May we not feel,” he wrote, “that in the virus, in their merging  with the cellular genome and reemerging from them, we observe the units  and process which, in the course of evolution, have created the  successful genetic patterns that underlie all living cells?” Regardless  of whether or not we consider viruses to be alive, it is time to  acknowledge and study them in their natural context—within the web of  life.
 					
 				 				 					
 						 Rights & Permissions 					 				 				 			
ABOUT THE AUTHOR(S)
LUIS  P. VILLARREAL is director of the Center for Virus Researchat the  University of California, Irvine. He was born in East LosAngeles. He  received his doctorate in biology from the Universityof California, San  Diego, and did postdoctoral research invirology at Stanford University  with Nobel laureate Paul Berg.He is active in science education and has  received a NationalScience Foundation Presidential Award for mentoring.  In his currentposition, Villarreal has established programs for the  rapiddevelopment of defenses against bioterrorism threats. He hastwo  sons and enjoys motorcycles and Latin music.
Read This Next
The Body
This Formula Calculates How Many Calories You Burn If You're Doing Absolutely Nothing
Florian Freistetter
Climate
Clouds May Speed Up Global Warming
Chelsea Harvey and E&E News
Environment
Wild Pigs Release as Much Carbon Emissions as 1 Million Cars
Christopher J. O'Bryan, Eve McDonald-Madden, Jim Hone, Matthew H. Holden, Nicholas R Patton and The Conversation US
Policy & Ethics
NASA Investigates Renaming James Webb Space Telescope after Anti-LGBT+ Claims
Alexandra Witze and Nature magazine
Environment
Pesticides Are Killing the Organisms That Keep Our Soils Healthy
Nathan Donley and Tari Gunstone | Opinion
Neurological Health
Immune Cells Suggest New Alzheimer's Treatment Possibilities
Jason Ulrich and David M. Holtzman
Advertisement