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REVIEW REVERSIBLE ELECTROPORATION OF VEGETABLE
REVIEW REVERSIBLE ELECTROPORATION OF VEGETABLE

... would include larger pores (around 50-nm radius) which tend to reseal more slowly (>1 s in some cases) or not at all (21). It is possible that the metabolic work that the cell needs to do when dealing with the formation of small or large pores is different and may depend on the extent of polar compo ...
Microbial Fuel Cell Using Inexpensive Materials
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5.1 How Is the Structure of the Cell Membrane Related to Its Function?
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... Related to Its Function?  Membranes are “fluid mosaics” in which proteins move within layers of lipids – The “fluid mosaic” model of a membrane was proposed in 1972 by S.J. Singer and G.L. Nicolson – This model indicates that each membrane consists of a mosaic, or “patchwork,” of different proteins ...
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... up the pipette was necessary in the older slices because of the need to go deeper into the slice to locate and patch onto healthy cells. The ez-gSEAL had no problem maintaining the set pressure, which was helpful in clearing the dead tissue away and allow better visualization of the target cell. A s ...
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... with centrifugal elutriation less synchrony was achieved. When the cells are arrested in G1 with Kfactor, it takes approximately one generation time (100 min at 23³C) until all cells have reached G1. During this period the expression of the cell wall proteins changed (Fig. 1): the mRNA levels of CWP ...
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Cytokinesis



Cytokinesis (cyto- + kinesis) is the process during cell division in which the cytoplasm of a single eukaryotic cell is divided to form two daughter cells. It usually initiates during the early stages of mitosis, and sometimes meiosis, splitting a mitotic cell in two, to ensure that chromosome number is maintained from one generation to the next. After cytokinesis two (daughter) cells will be formed that are exact copies of the (parent) original cell. After cytokinesis, each daughter cell is in the interphase portion of the cell cycle. In animal cells, one notable exception to the normal process of cytokinesis is oogenesis (the creation of an ovum in the ovarian follicle of the ovary), where the ovum takes almost all the cytoplasm and organelles, leaving very little for the resulting polar bodies, which then die. Another form of mitosis without cytokinesis occurs in the liver, yielding multinucleate cells. In plant cells, a dividing structure known as the cell plate forms within the centre of the cytoplasm and a new cell wall forms between the two daughter cells.Cytokinesis is distinguished from the prokaryotic process of binary fission.
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