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Julia Breedh

Antigenpresenterande cell - Wikipedia - 0 views

  • Antigenpresenterande
  • Antigenpresenterande cell
  • Antigenpresenterande cell (APC), cell som presenterar ett antigen för en annan cell. Detta leder till en aktivering av den andra cellen.
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  • Antigenpresenterande cell
  • Antigenpresenterande cell (APC), cell som presenterar ett antigen för en annan cell. Detta leder till en aktivering av den andra cellen.
  • Antigenpresenterande cell
  • Antigenpresenterande cell
  • Antigenpresenterande cell
  • Antigenpresenterande cell
  • Antigenpresenterande cell
  • Antigenpresenterande cell
  • Antigenpresenterande cell (APC), cell som presenterar ett antigen för en annan cell. Detta leder till en aktivering av den andra cellen.
  • Antigenpresenterande cell
  • Antigenpresenterande cell
  • Antigenpresenterande cell (APC), cell som presenterar ett antigen för en annan cell.
Julia Breedh

Dendritic cells during ongoing inflammation - 0 views

  • Role of airway dendritic cells during ongoing inflammation.
  • Role of airway dendritic cells during ongoing inflammation.
  • FIGURE 4 | Role of airway dendritic cells during ongoing inflammation.
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  • FIGURE 4 | Role of airway dendritic cells during ongoing inflammation.
  • The first cells that recognize allergen are dendritic cells
  • Role of airway dendritic cells during ongoing inflammation.
  • Role of airway dendritic cells during ongoing inflammation.
  • Role of airway dendritic cells during ongoing inflammation.
  • Role of airway dendritic cells during ongoing inflammation.
  • Role of airway dendritic cells during ongoing inflammation.
  • Role of airway dendritic cells during ongoing inflammation.
  • The first cells that recognize allergen are dendritic cells
  • The first cells that recognize allergen are dendritic cells
  • The first cells that recognize allergen are dendritic cells
  • The first cells that recognize allergen are dendritic cells
  • The first cells that recognize allergen are dendritic cells
  • The first cells that recognize allergen are dendritic cells
  • The first cells that recognize allergen are dendritic cells
Mbmizgin MB

Transformation (genetics) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • Plasmid transformation In order to persist and be stably maintained in the cell, a plasmid DNA molecule must contain an origin of replication, which allows it to be replicated in the cell independently of the chromosome. Because transformation usually produces a mixture of rare transformed cells and abundant non-transformed cells, a method is needed to identify the cells that have acquired the plasmid. Plasmids used in transformation experiments will usually also contain a gene giving resistance to an antibiotic that the intended recipient strain of bacteria is sensitive to. Cells able to grow on media containing this antibiotic will have been transformed by the plasmid, as cells lacking the plasmid will be unable to grow. Another marker, used for identifying E. coli cells that have acquired recombinant plasmids, is the lacZ gene, which codes for β-galactosidase. Because β-galactosidase is a homo-tetramer, with each monomer made up of one lacZ-α and one lacZ-ω protein, if only one of the two requisite proteins is expressed in the resulting cell, no functional enzyme will be formed. Thus, if a strain of E. coli without lacZ-α in its genome is transformed using a plasmid containing the missing gene fragment, transformed cells will produce β-galactosidase, while untransformed cells will not, as they are only able to produce the omega half of the monomer. In this type of transformation, the polylinker region of the plasmid lies in the lacZ-α gene fragment, meaning that successfully produced recombinant plasmids will have the desired gene inserted somewhere within lacZ-α. When this disrupted gene fragment is expressed by E. coli, no usable lacZ-α protein is produced, and therefore no usable β-galactosidase is formed. When grown on media containing the colorless, modified galactose sugar X-gal, colonies that are able to metabolize the substrate (and that have therefore been transformed, but not by recombinant plasmids) will appear blue in color; colonies that are not able to metabolize the substrate (and that have therefore been transformed by recombinant plasmids) will appear white.
tillie j

The Virtual Cell - 0 views

  • Pronunciation Guide
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    Animation om hur en cell ser ut. Många olika organeller i en eukaryot cell.
Julia Breedh

Dendritisk cell - Wikipedia - 0 views

  • Dendritisk cell
  • Den tar upp främmande antigen genom pinocytos och presenterar sedan detta för B-lymfocyter och T-lymfocyter i en lymfknuta.
tillie j

Endocytosis and Exocytosis - 0 views

  • Endocytosis is a process for moving items that are outside of the cell into the cytoplasm of the cell. Exocytosis is a process for moving items from the cytoplasm of the cell to the outside. Both endocytosis and exocytosis vary from the other forms of membrane transport, because materials do not cross through the lipid bilayer. Instead, items being moved into or out of the cell are engulfed by entire sections of the membrane lipid bilayer. They are being swallowed up or spit out by the membrane so to speak.
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    Lätt, förståelig förklaring på hur endocytos och excytos fungerar.
Mbmizgin MB

Plasmid - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • A plasmid is an extra-chromosomal DNA molecule separate from the chromosomal DNA which is capable of replicating independently of the chromosomal DNA.[1] In many cases, it is circular and double-stranded. Plasmids usually occur naturally in bacteria, but are sometimes found in eukaryotic organisms (e.g., the 2-micrometre-ring in Saccharomyces cerevisiae). Plasmid size varies from 1 to over 1,000 kilobase pairs (kbp).[2][3][4] The number of identical plasmids within a single cell can range anywhere from one to even thousands under some circumstances. Plasmids can be considered to be part of the mobilome, since they are often associated with conjugation, a mechanism of horizontal gene transfer.
  • Plasmids used in genetic engineering are called vectors. Plasmids serve as important tools in genetics and biotechnology labs, where they are commonly used to multiply (make many copies of) or express particular genes.[2] Many plasmids are commercially available for such uses. The gene to be replicated is inserted into copies of a plasmid containing genes that make cells resistant to particular antibiotics and a multiple cloning site (MCS, or polylinker), which is a short region containing several commonly used restriction sites allowing the easy insertion of DNA fragments at this location. Next, the plasmids are inserted into bacteria by a process called transformation. Then, the bacteria are exposed to the particular antibiotics. Only bacteria which take up copies of the plasmid survive , since the plasmid makes them resistant. In particular, the protecting genes are expressed (used to make a protein) and the expressed protein breaks down the antibiotics. In this way the antibiotics act as a filter to select only the modified bacteria
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  • Fertility-F-plasmids, which contain tra-genes. They are capable of conjugation (transfer of genetic material between bacteria which are touching). Resistance-(R)plasmids, which contain genes that can build a resistance against antibiotics or poisons and help bacteria produce pili. Historically known as R-factors, before the nature of plasmids was understood. Col-plasmids, which contain genes that code for (determine the production of) bacteriocins, proteins that can kill other bacteria. Degradative plasmids, which enable the digestion of unusual substances, e.g., toluene or salicylic acid. Virulence plasmids, which turn the bacterium into a pathogen (one that causes disease).
CaptBryngel

Cell (biology) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    About the cell.
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    About the cell.
CaptBryngel

The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2003 - Information for the Public - 1 views

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    Good research about the cell
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    Good research about the cell
tillie j

Molecular Expressions Cell Biology: The Golgi Apparatus - 0 views

  • The Golgi apparatus (GA), also called Golgi body or Golgi complex and found universally in both plant and animal cells
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    Fakta om golgiapparat på engelska. Sidan är från Florida State University.
c-svedhem

Molecular Expressions Cell Biology: Ribosomes - 0 views

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    ribosom
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    ribosom
Niklas Karlsson

Cell - Wikipedia - 1 views

Zukki Jeewaratnam

Centriole - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    A text about the organelle, Centriol in the cell.
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    A text about the organelle, Centriol in the cell.
Mbmizgin MB

Bacterial conjugation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • Bacterial conjugation is often incorrectly regarded as the bacterial equivalent of sexual reproduction or mating. It is not actually sexual, as it does not involve the fusing of gametes and the creation of a zygote, nor is there equal exchange of genetic material. It is merely the transfer of genetic information from a donor cell to a recipient. In order to perform conjugation, one of the bacteria, the donor, must play host to a conjugative or mobilizable genetic element, most often a conjugative or mobilizable plasmid or transposon.[4][5] Most conjugative plasmids have systems ensuring that the recipient cell does not already contain a similar element. A transformed cell is known as a transconjugant.
tillie j

Golgi apparatus - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • The Golgi apparatus (also called the Golgi bodies, Golgi complex, dictyosome, or more colloquially Golgi) is an organelle found in most eukaryotic cells. It was identified in 1898 by the Italian physician Camillo Golgi and was named after him.
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    Om golgiapparaten på Wikipedia - på engelska. Mer fakta än på svenska Wikipedia, och mer djupgående.
tillie j

Fil:Cellorganeller pic swe 27-05-2007.png - Wikipedia - 0 views

  • Fil:Cellorganeller pic swe 27-05-2007.png
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    Modell över en eukaryot cell från Wikipedia.
tillie j

Structural Biochemistry/Cell Organelles/Golgi Apparatus - Wikibooks, collection of open... - 1 views

  • The Golgi apparatus, also called the Golgi complex, is commonly found in eukaryotic cells
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    Wikibooks - om golgiapparaten. Tror att det står mer på Wikipedia men detta är en bra och grundläggande. På engelska.
tillie j

Vesicle (biology) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • A vesicle is a bubble of liquid within a cell. More technically, a vesicle is a small, intracellular, membrane-enclosed sac that stores or transports substances within a cell. Vesicles form naturally because of the properties of lipid membranes (see micelle). Most vesicles have specialized functions depending on what materials they contain.
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    Fakta om "vesicle" - vesikel på svenska. Från wikipedia, engelska.
c-svedhem

Biology4Kids.com: Cell Structure: Ribosomes - 0 views

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    ribosom
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    ribosom
Zukki Jeewaratnam

Mitosis - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

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    A process that takes act in the cell which separates the chromosomes.
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