Ebolavirus entering a cell - HD stock video
"Animation of an Ebolavirus particle being taken into a cell. Ebolavirus causes the deadly disease Ebola haemorrhagic fever. The virus enters cells through a process called macropinocytosis. This is a method by which cells naturally take in relatively large particles or volumes of solution. The Ebolavirus hijacks this pathway to gain entry to the cell. The process begins with the virus approaching a folded region of the cell membrane, known as a ruffle. The virus binds to the surface by the ruffle and stimulates the closure of the ruffles around the virus. The resulting closed vesicle is called a macropinosome, and once it is closed, it detaches from the rest of the membrane above it, and moves into the cell body. Here the macropinosome binds with a lysosome, in which the virus coating opens to release the genetic material. Ebola causes vomiting, diarrhoea and severe internal bleeding, and death often follows from fluid loss. The lost body fluids are highly contagious, and the virus can spread rapidly if good hygiene is not maintained. Ebola occurs in periodic outbreaks, the largest of which has been the ongoing outbreak in West Africa. Original same as master."





PURCHASE A LICENSE
Get personalized pricing by telling us when, where, and how you want to use this asset.
DETAILS
Credit:
51³Ô¹ÏÍø #:
618592975
License type:
Rights-ready
Collection:
Image Bank Film
Max file size:
1920 x 1080 px - 809 MB
Clip length:
00:00:43:24
Upload date:
Release info:
No release required
Mastered to:
QuickTime 8-bit Photo-JPEG HD 1920x1080 25p
Categories:
- Animated Video,
- Ebola,
- Entering,
- Pathogen,
- 2014,
- 40 Seconds or Greater,
- Biological Cell,
- Biology,
- Biomedical Illustration,
- Broken,
- Cholesterol,
- Close-up,
- Closing,
- Color Image,
- Condition,
- Danger,
- Digital Animation,
- Digitally Generated Image,
- Direction,
- Education,
- Epidemic,
- Film - Moving Image,
- Film Montage,
- HD Format,
- Healthcare And Medicine,
- Horizontal,
- Human Tissue,
- Ideas,
- Illness,
- Infectious Disease,
- Lysosome,
- Membrane,
- Microbiology,
- No People,
- Non US Film Location,
- On The Move,
- Particle,
- Real Time Video,
- Receptor,
- Releasing,
- Research,
- Ruffled,
- Science,
- Skill,
- Vesicle,
- Virus,
- West Africa,