transduced
71transduce — /trans doohs , dyoohs , tranz /, v.t., transduced, transducing. 1. to convert (energy) from one form into another. 2. Genetics. to cause transduction in (a cell). [1945 50; back formation from TRANSDUCER or TRANSDUCTION] * * * …
72transduction — transductant /trans duk teuhnt, tranz /, n. transductional, adj. /trans duk sheuhn, tranz /, n. Genetics. the transfer of genetic material from one cell to another by means of a virus. [1952; TRANS + duction, as in INDUCTION, PRODUCTION, etc.] *… …
73ear, human — ▪ anatomy Introduction organ of hearing and equilibrium that detects and analyzes noises by transduction (or the conversion of sound waves into electrochemical impulses) and maintains the sense of balance (equilibrium). The human ear, like …
74skin disease — ▪ pathology Introduction any of the diseases or disorders that affect the human skin. They have a wide range of causes. General features Although most diseases affecting the skin originate in the layers of the skin, such abnormalities are… …
75transductant — noun A bacterial cell into which genetic material has been transduced …
76untransduced — adjective Not transduced …
77tranduced — adjective transduced …
78nontransduced — adjective Not transduced …
79Sense — In biology and medicine, the faculty of sensory reception. The ability to convey specific types of external or internal stimuli to the brain and perceive them. Sensory reception occurs through a process known as transduction in which stimuli are… …
80Chemorepulsion — is the directional movement of a cell away from a substance. Of the two directional varieties of chemotaxis, chemoattraction has been studied to a much greater extent. Only recently have the key components of the chemorepulsive pathway been… …