I don’t know of any examples where this is the case.
Viruses are small protein cases with a little bit of DNA inside, a few enzymes and a needle to inject the whole mixture into a host cell. They don’t have the machinery to produce things that could kill other viruses and they don’t really have anything that is killable about them.
It has been observed that if you are infected with two similar viruses neither virus is as intense. This is probably because of competition for host cells.
I would say no as a virus cannot produce anything like proteins until it can take over a host cell. If this was another virus, there would be no ribosomes to make any proteins, so there would be no way to kill or multiply.
Viruses don’t have the machinery they need to multiply by themselves which is why the hijack other cells. They are also not technically alive because of this reason! So there is no reason to attack another virus because another virus can’t give it anything to help it survive or multiply.
If two viruses of the same type infect one cell, what tends to happen is that they’ll combine their dna and all the viruses from that cell will contain DNA from the two original viruses! They always find a compromise…
Robert Hampson, I thought most viruses have RNA. Also, out of interest, what does RNA stand for? I know it’s something nucleus acid, just not sure what the r is.
Comments
Gingerwizard commented on :
Robert Hampson, I thought most viruses have RNA. Also, out of interest, what does RNA stand for? I know it’s something nucleus acid, just not sure what the r is.
Marikka commented on :
RNA = Ribonucleic acid DNA = Dexoyribonucleic acid
Illuminate commented on :
i cud kell i vIrus