Powerpoint template for scientific posters
... Transgluteal CT guided biopsy and drainage shares many of the same principles as percutaneous intervention by any other route. This includes the appropriate indications, contraindications and patient preparation. However, aspects unique to the transgluteal approach include patient positioning, route ...
... Transgluteal CT guided biopsy and drainage shares many of the same principles as percutaneous intervention by any other route. This includes the appropriate indications, contraindications and patient preparation. However, aspects unique to the transgluteal approach include patient positioning, route ...
the versatile bacterial type iv secretion systems
... Since the discovery of conjugation systems, a vast body of literature has accumulated describing the factors governing the expression of transfer (tra) genes, the assembly and overall architectures of the conjugation machines, the contributions of various subunits to substrate transfer, and, most re ...
... Since the discovery of conjugation systems, a vast body of literature has accumulated describing the factors governing the expression of transfer (tra) genes, the assembly and overall architectures of the conjugation machines, the contributions of various subunits to substrate transfer, and, most re ...
tot procedure
... • The needle passed through the groin incision, through the Obturator membrane and muscles and brought into the vaginal incision. ...
... • The needle passed through the groin incision, through the Obturator membrane and muscles and brought into the vaginal incision. ...
tot procedure
... • The needle passed through the groin incision, through the Obturator membrane and muscles and brought into the vaginal incision. ...
... • The needle passed through the groin incision, through the Obturator membrane and muscles and brought into the vaginal incision. ...
Bacteria
... – Make up most of the bacteria kingdom – Has more individual species than all of the other five kingdoms combined – Classified by the way they get food • Consumers (eat other organisms) • Decomposers (feed on dead things) • Producers (use sun to make food; are green) ...
... – Make up most of the bacteria kingdom – Has more individual species than all of the other five kingdoms combined – Classified by the way they get food • Consumers (eat other organisms) • Decomposers (feed on dead things) • Producers (use sun to make food; are green) ...
brow lifting to the upper temporal line 1.5 cm
... Fixation of the orbito-superciliar fascia*. (*This fascia was found by the author to fix the superciliar skin to the upper orbital rim). The needle passes from point A to point B through subdermis below the orbito-superciliar fascia, i.e. just below the line of the eyebrow. After exiting perpendicul ...
... Fixation of the orbito-superciliar fascia*. (*This fascia was found by the author to fix the superciliar skin to the upper orbital rim). The needle passes from point A to point B through subdermis below the orbito-superciliar fascia, i.e. just below the line of the eyebrow. After exiting perpendicul ...
No Slide Title
... TGN to plasma membrane - two major types of vesicles: secretory vesicles for regulated secretion and transport vesicles for constitutive secretion How do proteins get sorted to the correct vesicle? Common mechanism seems to function for many regulated secretory proteins (ACTH, insulin, trypsinogen) ...
... TGN to plasma membrane - two major types of vesicles: secretory vesicles for regulated secretion and transport vesicles for constitutive secretion How do proteins get sorted to the correct vesicle? Common mechanism seems to function for many regulated secretory proteins (ACTH, insulin, trypsinogen) ...
Possible new intranuclear symbionts of Paramecium caudatum
... characteristic for so-called R-bodies of Caedibacter (Preer et al.,1966; Pond et al., 1989). There is some correlation between the presence of these structures and different variants of the cell shape and obvious various stages of symbiont destruction: they were more frequent in elongated cells, whi ...
... characteristic for so-called R-bodies of Caedibacter (Preer et al.,1966; Pond et al., 1989). There is some correlation between the presence of these structures and different variants of the cell shape and obvious various stages of symbiont destruction: they were more frequent in elongated cells, whi ...
BRACHIAL PLEXUS BLOCK
... above and posterior to the subclavian Pulse and directed caudally against the skin. The needle is advanced until a paresthesia is encountered or muscle contraction of a forearm is noted. If the paresthesia or contraction is still observed ,then 25-40 ml of local anesthesia is injected. If the ...
... above and posterior to the subclavian Pulse and directed caudally against the skin. The needle is advanced until a paresthesia is encountered or muscle contraction of a forearm is noted. If the paresthesia or contraction is still observed ,then 25-40 ml of local anesthesia is injected. If the ...
22-1
... o Everyday a bacteria could divide 72 times…which = 4 billion cells! Most reproduce by binary fission (mitosis – splitting in half) a type of asexual reproduction. ...
... o Everyday a bacteria could divide 72 times…which = 4 billion cells! Most reproduce by binary fission (mitosis – splitting in half) a type of asexual reproduction. ...
Ring, helix, sphere and cylinder: the basic geometry of prokaryotic
... the replication of the chromosome proceeds, because of the transient nature of the constraints, the competition for membrane space and the cooperativity between neighbouring genes on the same strand. This bias would provide bidirectionality to the movement of replicated daughter strands, whereas Bro ...
... the replication of the chromosome proceeds, because of the transient nature of the constraints, the competition for membrane space and the cooperativity between neighbouring genes on the same strand. This bias would provide bidirectionality to the movement of replicated daughter strands, whereas Bro ...
Infraclavicular block
... The axillary and musculocutaneous nerves leave the sheath at or before the coracoid process in 50% of patients. The plexus, which begins to spread around the axillary artery at this level, is not as compact as the more proximal trunks. Therefore, this block typically has longer latency, and may not ...
... The axillary and musculocutaneous nerves leave the sheath at or before the coracoid process in 50% of patients. The plexus, which begins to spread around the axillary artery at this level, is not as compact as the more proximal trunks. Therefore, this block typically has longer latency, and may not ...
(Renal transport Process).
... Osmotic diuresis (Increase Glucose, Mannitol and Urea) increase their conc. In the filtered load then causes a decrease in water reabsorption and Na (the solution should be iso-osmotic in PCT) Diuretic Drugs (Lasix) Poorly reabsorbed anions causes retension of equal amount of Na. ...
... Osmotic diuresis (Increase Glucose, Mannitol and Urea) increase their conc. In the filtered load then causes a decrease in water reabsorption and Na (the solution should be iso-osmotic in PCT) Diuretic Drugs (Lasix) Poorly reabsorbed anions causes retension of equal amount of Na. ...
6-Renal Physiology 6 (Renal transport Process
... Osmotic diuresis (Increase Glucose, Mannitol and Urea) increase their conc. In the filtered load then causes a decrease in water reabsorption and Na (the solution should be iso-osmotic in PCT) Diuretic Drugs (Lasix) Poorly reabsorbed anions causes retention of equal amount of Na. ...
... Osmotic diuresis (Increase Glucose, Mannitol and Urea) increase their conc. In the filtered load then causes a decrease in water reabsorption and Na (the solution should be iso-osmotic in PCT) Diuretic Drugs (Lasix) Poorly reabsorbed anions causes retention of equal amount of Na. ...
F factor conjugation is a true type IV secretion system
... extracellular factors such as phage and receptors on recipients and (2) lateral gene transfer of F-, P- and I-like propilin and processing genes between T4SS subfamilies. In fact, the cassette-like nature for the development of the T4SS is striking and suggests that there has been considerable oppor ...
... extracellular factors such as phage and receptors on recipients and (2) lateral gene transfer of F-, P- and I-like propilin and processing genes between T4SS subfamilies. In fact, the cassette-like nature for the development of the T4SS is striking and suggests that there has been considerable oppor ...
Chapter Test A
... The first plant cell could have evolved from bacteria similar to cyanobacteria living inside large cells. Cyanobacteria are bacteria that contain chlorophyll, which is used to produce food through photosynthesis. The bacteria could make food while the cell provided the bacteria with an environment i ...
... The first plant cell could have evolved from bacteria similar to cyanobacteria living inside large cells. Cyanobacteria are bacteria that contain chlorophyll, which is used to produce food through photosynthesis. The bacteria could make food while the cell provided the bacteria with an environment i ...
Lipid-modified morphogens: functions of fats - treisman lab
... and unsaturated fatty acids, and they are attached in the secretory pathway by different classes of enzymes. Lipid attachments make crucial contributions to protein function in vivo through a diverse array of mechanisms. They can promote protein maturation and secretion, membrane tethering, targetin ...
... and unsaturated fatty acids, and they are attached in the secretory pathway by different classes of enzymes. Lipid attachments make crucial contributions to protein function in vivo through a diverse array of mechanisms. They can promote protein maturation and secretion, membrane tethering, targetin ...
Entry of oomycete and fungal effectors into plant and animal host cells
... proteins associated with innate immunity including PRR signalling domains, MAP kinases, the host cytoskeleton, the host programmed cell death machinery, the host ubiquitination machinery, the host poly(ADP)-ribosylation machinery and the host transcriptional machinery (TortoAlalibo et al., 2009; 201 ...
... proteins associated with innate immunity including PRR signalling domains, MAP kinases, the host cytoskeleton, the host programmed cell death machinery, the host ubiquitination machinery, the host poly(ADP)-ribosylation machinery and the host transcriptional machinery (TortoAlalibo et al., 2009; 201 ...
The Rise of Pathogens: Predation as a Factor Driving the Evolution
... environment and when they reach a critical concentration, they bind to and activate intracellular receptors that alter gene expression. QS was first described in Vibrio fischeri where it controls luminescence [56]. For many years, it was thought that QS only occurred in a few marine bacteria, but it ...
... environment and when they reach a critical concentration, they bind to and activate intracellular receptors that alter gene expression. QS was first described in Vibrio fischeri where it controls luminescence [56]. For many years, it was thought that QS only occurred in a few marine bacteria, but it ...
Full text in pdf format
... Calyptogena soyoae harbors symbiotic bacteria in branchial epithelia (Endow 1988), like other vesicomyld clams such as C. magnifica, C. pacifica and C. elonyata (Cavanaugh 1983, Vetter 1985). These bacteria have been found to be sulfur oxidizers and have been postulated to be important to the nutrit ...
... Calyptogena soyoae harbors symbiotic bacteria in branchial epithelia (Endow 1988), like other vesicomyld clams such as C. magnifica, C. pacifica and C. elonyata (Cavanaugh 1983, Vetter 1985). These bacteria have been found to be sulfur oxidizers and have been postulated to be important to the nutrit ...
Different subcellular locations of secretome components of
... components of these secretion systems and their substrates have shown that they can be present at various locations in the cell. The translocons of the general Sec secretion system in the rod-shaped bacterium Bacillus subtilis have been shown to localize in spirals along the cytoplasmic membrane, wh ...
... components of these secretion systems and their substrates have shown that they can be present at various locations in the cell. The translocons of the general Sec secretion system in the rod-shaped bacterium Bacillus subtilis have been shown to localize in spirals along the cytoplasmic membrane, wh ...
The Guanine Nucleotide–Binding Switch in Three Dimensions
... different proteins and involves extra elements for some proteins. Strictly speaking, the extent of the switch regions needs to be determined for each protein separately from the corresponding structures. In Ras they involve residues 32 to 38 for switch I and 59 to 67 for switch II. The canonical swi ...
... different proteins and involves extra elements for some proteins. Strictly speaking, the extent of the switch regions needs to be determined for each protein separately from the corresponding structures. In Ras they involve residues 32 to 38 for switch I and 59 to 67 for switch II. The canonical swi ...
Bacteria - TeacherWeb
... They can reproduce rapidly. Just two bacteria can become 562,929,940,000,000,in a 24 hour period. ...
... They can reproduce rapidly. Just two bacteria can become 562,929,940,000,000,in a 24 hour period. ...
Egg Microinjection Technique and Morpholinos
... 1. Clean the calibration micrometer slide with EtOH and put a drop of halocarbon oil on it. 2. Put calibration slide on upside-down petrie dish lid, so that you do not have to adjust the micromanipulator position before and after, or change greatly the focal plane from that used for injection. Focus ...
... 1. Clean the calibration micrometer slide with EtOH and put a drop of halocarbon oil on it. 2. Put calibration slide on upside-down petrie dish lid, so that you do not have to adjust the micromanipulator position before and after, or change greatly the focal plane from that used for injection. Focus ...
Iron and the Pathogenicity of Bacteria
... the element iron (Fe) in human and animal hosts. This research spans several decades, which may be briefly summarized with a few statements. First, not just microorganisms, but essentially all organisms, require iron for a variety of metabolic processes, including energy generation by cytochrome-con ...
... the element iron (Fe) in human and animal hosts. This research spans several decades, which may be briefly summarized with a few statements. First, not just microorganisms, but essentially all organisms, require iron for a variety of metabolic processes, including energy generation by cytochrome-con ...
Type three secretion system
Type three secretion system (often written Type III secretion system and abbreviated TTSS or T3SS, also called Injectisome or Injectosome) is a protein appendage found in several Gram-negative bacteria.In pathogenic bacteria, the needle-like structure is used as a sensory probe to detect the presence of eukaryotic organisms and secrete proteins that help the bacteria infect them. The secreted effector proteins are secreted directly from the bacterial cell into the eukaryotic (host) cell, where they exert a number of effects that help the pathogen to survive and to escape an immune response.