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Question
Why are Koch’s postulates not applicable to viruses?
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Solution
Koch’s postulates are not applicable to viruses because one of the key requirements is that the pathogen must be isolated and grown in pure culture on an artificial medium. Viruses, however, cannot be cultured on artificial media (such as agar plates or broth) because they require living host cells to reproduce. This makes it impossible to fulfill the second postulate of Koch’s criteria for viruses.
Additionally, some viruses do not have suitable animal models for reproducing the disease as required by the third postulate. Therefore, viral diseases cannot be established according to Koch’s postulates, which were originally formulated primarily for bacterial pathogens that can be cultured independently in artificial media.
