linkedin post 2016-05-24 04:23:42

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SIMPLE IS THE NEW COMPLEX. "The interesting thing about these results is that they indicate that viruses must have diversified from ancient cells by a process called reductive evolution, where organisms simplify instead of becoming more complex." http://www.popsci.com/new-evidence-that-viruses-are-alive View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2016-05-24 04:20:49

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STREAMLINED BEASTS. "Viruses are ancient and have played a major role in biological evolution. Such structurally simple creatures were not defined as living until recently. They take over a host's cellular machinery in order to replicate, and as such are true obligate parasites, unable to replicate without a host." https://lnkd.in/enwDruZ View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2016-05-23 04:59:32

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ORIGINAL INHABITANTS. "There are 10 to the 33 viruses on our planet, about 10 times more than bacteria. There are only about 10 to the 9 human beings – a small minority, which makes us the invaders in the viral world, not vice versa. They are present in the oceans, 10 to the 12 per ml, in the soil, abundant in plants, and inside the human body. Healthy humans consist of about 10 to the 13 cells and harbor 10 to the 14 to 10 to the 18 bacteria and an unknown number of viruses." https://lnkd.in/eGaw2Kq View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2016-05-23 04:56:11

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VAST NUMBERS. "Viruses are the most abundant ‘life forms’ in aquatic systems, and their number probably exceeds 10(29) in the ocean. Aligning these oceanic viruses and assuming an average diameter of 50 nm for a marine virus, the viral string-of-pearls would be 400,000 light years long. In comparison, the diameter of our galaxy, the Milky Way, is only 25,000 light years." http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1046/j.1462-2920.2003.00539.x/full View in LinkedIn
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linkedin post 2016-05-23 04:50:54

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UBIQUITOUS VIRUSES "are numerically the most abundant biological entities, and they are profoundly important in shaping the ecology and evolution of just about every species on Earth. Yet viruses are not considered to be alive by most biologists, and they have arguably fallen by the wayside in the genomics revolution." http://www.genomebiology.com/2005/6/3/212 View in LinkedIn
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