Viruses mutate but a membrane-bound filamentous virus that doesn't live in epithelia as its main host cells is never something that becomes stable airborne
Can you explain like to a non-cellbioguy, what does the above sentence mean in relation to this?
Yes! Thanks for pointing me at that paper, I hadn't seen it before.
Enveloped viruses are in general much more fragile than non-enveloped viruses. They contain the genetic material of the virus and viral proteins surrounded by a lipid membrane derived from the membrane of a host cell, which they then fuse with the membrane of another host cell to get the genome in. Easier entry to the host cell at the expense of fragility. If the membrane is broken the virus is dead, and a bubble of membrane is a lot more fragile than a protein/RNA crystal (which is bas...
Related to: Forty Days , Low Hanging Poop
From professor Gregory Cochran's blog West Hunters.