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Cell Analogy – Performance Assessment
Cell Analogy – Performance Assessment

...  Each of your similes must be written in the following format – underline the name of the organelle in each simile. Example: 1. Mr. Hughes is like a nucleus because Mr. Hughes controls all activities in the school, just like the nucleus controls all activities in the cell.  Put your name on the to ...
Resource Management in Tessellation OS
Resource Management in Tessellation OS

... • Increasing appetite for – Responsive user interfaces – High-quality multimedia applications with real-time requirements ...
Cancer Attributes of Cancerous Tumors Unregulated cell division
Cancer Attributes of Cancerous Tumors Unregulated cell division

Cell Processes Review
Cell Processes Review

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Homeostasis & Transport
Homeostasis & Transport

...  Net movement = Water out of ...
Multiple Choice - Net Start Class
Multiple Choice - Net Start Class

... Which two body cavities are separated by the diaphragm? 10. The ability of an organism to react to stimuli is responsiveness. 11. List the four macromolecules and example of each. carbohydrate- sugar (glucose) and starch protein – enzymes, catalysts nucleotides- DNA, RNA lipids- fats, phospholipids ...
INTRODUCTION TO THE CELL File
INTRODUCTION TO THE CELL File

... 1. A cell cannot survive if it is totally isolated from its environment. The cell membrane is a complex barrier separating every cell from its external environment. 2. This "Selectively Permeable" membrane regulates what passes into and out of the cell. 3. The cell membrane is a fluid mosaic of prot ...
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... virus" remained as a clear-cut example of a cancer-causing virus. The virus soon became an important tool of cancer researchers. In 1966, Rous was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, 55 years after his discovery. At that time he was 87 years old. ...
Kingdoms Project Rubric
Kingdoms Project Rubric

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Supplementary Methods, Figure, Table and Movie Legends
Supplementary Methods, Figure, Table and Movie Legends

... were transfected using the Amaxa Nucleofector transfection system as described by manufacturers protocol (Amaxa, Germany). Cells were selected using 0.6 mg/ml G418 and single cell clones were isolated using a standard dilution cloning procedure. Photo-activation and photo-bleaching in vitro. For in ...
Sushi and the science of synapses
Sushi and the science of synapses

... transport RNAs that code for one of the two subunits of the enzyme CaMKII. So this component is destined to be synthesized on site, at the synapse. The other subunit, however, is made in the cell body. Only when the two come together is the active enzyme formed. “Now everything fits,” says Kiebler. ...
Bacterial Toxins
Bacterial Toxins

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An Introduction to Med. Biophysics - Lectures For UG-5
An Introduction to Med. Biophysics - Lectures For UG-5

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Assessing Inquiry_13May09_seminar_v2 - PLC-METS
Assessing Inquiry_13May09_seminar_v2 - PLC-METS

... Theory: Organisms are made up of cells. Cells are small living units. Animal and plant cells are different. Principles: Living things include bacteria, plants and animals so all must be made of cells. Concepts – Words: cell, living, microscope, similar, different, stains, organelles ...
AP Bio Ch 4
AP Bio Ch 4

... metabolism and enough ribosomes, enzymes, etc. to sustain life upper limits: determined by the surface area to volume ratio (as a cell increases in size, its volume grows proportionately more than its surface area) - surface area must be large enough for cell volume (to provide adequate exchange sur ...
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... Delivers oxygen to parts of the body through the circulatory system Hemoglobin carries oxygen from the lungs to tissues in the body, and carbon dioxide from back to the lungs ...
Introduction to Pathology
Introduction to Pathology

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Membrane Notes
Membrane Notes

... • Water is so small and there is so much of it the cell can’t control it’s movement through the cell membrane. ...
Introduction to Pathology
Introduction to Pathology

... Concept of Adaptation: When cells encounter physiologic stresses or pathologic stimuli from outside and inside of body, they can alter themselves to achieve a new steady state and preserve viability. All kinds of adaptation may be considered as disorders of growth and/or differentiation Cellular ada ...
View Poster - Technology Networks
View Poster - Technology Networks

... single sperm cell samples with a mean PCR efficiency of 62.8%. Furthermore, we were able to identify a sample containing more than one cell allowing to exclude “contaminated” samples from further analysis. ...
Levels of Organization
Levels of Organization

... The First Level Within multi-cellular organisms there is division of labor. Division of labor means that the work (labor) of keeping the organism alive is divided (division) among the different parts of the body. Each part has a job to do and as each part does its special job, it works in harmony wi ...
Gated ion channels
Gated ion channels

... Function of Golgi Apparatus Proteins made in the ER are packaged into tiny vesicles, which pinch off and move towards the golgi apparatus. Vesicles fuse with the golgi membrane and release the proteins. Enzymes within the golgi modify the proteins The processed molecules eventually pinch off an ...
The Art of Looking at Cells
The Art of Looking at Cells

... – These compartmentalize the interior of the cell – This allows the cell to carry out a variety of activities simultaneously. ie. Poisonous H2O2 made in the peroxisomes while hormones are being folded in the endoplasmic reticulum. ...
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Cell culture



Cell culture is the process by which cells are grown under controlled conditions, generally outside of their natural environment. In practice, the term ""cell culture"" now refers to the culturing of cells derived from multicellular eukaryotes, especially animal cells, in contrast with other types of culture that also grow cells, such as plant tissue culture, fungal culture, and microbiological culture (of microbes). The historical development and methods of cell culture are closely interrelated to those of tissue culture and organ culture. Viral culture is also related, with cells as hosts for the viruses. The laboratory technique of maintaining live cell lines (a population of cells descended from a single cell and containing the same genetic makeup) separated from their original tissue source became more robust in the middle 20th century.
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