Use "phage|phages" in a sentence

1. ‘For example, certain protein receptors are common to a colicin and a virulent phage; others, like the fig product, can adsorb a Bacteriocin, virulent phages of distinct origins, and even a temperate phage.’

2. Bullous impetigo is a superficial infection of skin typically caused by phage group II staphylococci and, less often, by other staphylococci phages

3. This new research initiative encourages studies using rigorous scientific conditions to assess the potential of phages or phage products as an adjunct or replacement to antibiotics.

4. Phage definition is - Bacteriophage

5. New phages can develop by acquiring restriction enzymes from plasmids.

6. Phage therapy, viral phage therapy, or phagotherapy is the therapeutic use of Bacteriophages to treat pathogenic bacterial infections

7. Bacteriophages, known as phages, are a form of viruses

8. Bacteriophage ( phage ) A virus that infects bacteria.

9. The phage has replicated and the donor cells have lysed.

10. When phage in vivo circulated at enough long period of time, some phage particles could extravasate in some organs or tissues and internalized there.

11. Bacteriophage (phage) are viruses that specifically infect bacteria

12. And you think Klingons are immune to this phage?

13. While all stages allowed phage adsorption, the daughter cells were most efficient.

14. Varied Kunitz domains can be displayed on phage at a low valency.

15. Phage chromosome is inserted into the continuity of the bacterial chromosome.

16. Phages, formally known as Bacteriophages, are viruses that solely kill and selectively target bacteria

17. In recent years, phage display was considered for vaccine development.

18. Bacteriophages (or phages) are obligate intracellular parasites that infect bacteria and reproduce by hijacking their host’s biosynthetic pathways.4 Phages are classified as either lytic or lysogenic based upon their replication strategy

19. A Bacteriophage (informally, phage) is a virus that infects and replicates within bacteria

20. Lysogeny is a semi - permanent association between the phage and host chromosomes.

21. Method for preparing high-throughput sequenceable dna from individual plaques of phages presenting peptides

22. What are Bacteriophages? Bacteriophages, also known as phages, are ubiquitous viruses, found wherever bacteria exist

23. Bacteriophages (phages) are viruses of bacteria that can kill and lyse the bacteria they infect

24. Bacteriophage ( or phage ): Any of a group of usually complex viruses that infect Bacteria.

25. Bacteriophage phage : Any of a group of usually complex viruses that infect Bacteria.

26. Bacteriophages, also known as phages, are viruses that infect and replicate only in bacterial cells

27. This demonstrated that the phage is resistant to the enzyme while intact.

28. And most of these viruses - called bacteriophage, or phage for short - make their bacterial victims sick.

29. Bacteriophage that parasitises a host bacterium without lysing it is called “temperate phage

30. But apparently no one else has looked for a phage that might produce such a toxin.

31. These results indicated that phages are protected to some extent from UV radiation when adsorbed on clay minerals.

32. The invention belongs to a humanized phage antibody library method for synthesizing fully humanized antibody.

33. Comparatively, phage display is a recently discovered technology, whereby, Bacteriophages play a significant role

34. Bacteriophages - called phages for short - are involved in the spread of antibiotic-resistant bacteria from factory farming

35. If the GMM did not carry self-transmissible plasmids or transducing phages, active transfer is practically excluded.

36. Bacteriophage.news is a virtual space that provides general news, research articles & patient stories on phage therapy.

37. The various differentiation stages in the host development exhibited different affinities for phage adsorption and development.

38. In early 1919, d'Hérelle isolated phages from chicken feces, successfully treating a plague of chicken typhus with them.

39. 1) A λ phage Adsorbs to and then successfully transfers its DNA into an E

40. In the future it may complement or even replace standard techniques such as phage typing.

41. The isolation of phages by d'Herelle works like this: Nutritional medium is infected with bacteria; the medium turns opaque.

42. The medium is filtered through porcelain filter, holding back bacteria and larger objects; only the smaller phages pass through.

43. AIM : To construct a anti dodecane tertraacetic acid yttrium ( DOTA Y ) immune Fab phage antibody library.

44. Objective To further reconstruct the new phage display vector for more effectively displaying the foreign random peptide library.

45. (Note: See Bacteriophagy for more definitions.) Quick definitions from WordNet ( bacteriophage ) noun : a virus that is parasitic in bacteria; it uses the bacterium's machinery and energy to produce more phage until the bacterium is destroyed and phage is released to invade surrounding bacteria

46. Phage type 29 was also the most frequently noted phage type among animal sources and in 2004 was identified in 65% (15/23) and 77% (23/30) of abattoir chicken isolates and chicken retail meat isolates, respectively, that were resistant to A2C-AMP.

47. The basic structural features of Bacteriophages are illustrated in Figure 1, which depicts the phage called T4

48. Viruses that infect and use bacterial resources are classified as Bacteriophages (or phages) and represent the most abundant life form on Earth

49. Cutting edge and authoritative, Bacteriophages: Methods and Protocols, Volume III is a valuable resource for both established and novice phage scientists

50. Observations that RNA synthesized in the presence of rifamycin was hybridizable exclusively with the phage DNA and that actinomycin D inhibited the phage growth indicated that the synthesis of a new species of RNA was required for the development of PBS 1.

51. The PhI50's of the LPS, adsorption rate constants with strain PAO and the plaque morphologies of these five phages were quite similar.

52. Equipped with high-throughput phage display platform, Creative Biolabs enables the identification of Abzymes with high specificity and

53. Although phage therapy has been around for a long time, the idea of adding Bacteriophages to a supplement is

54. A 2006 study found that microwaving wet sponges for two minutes (at 1000 watt power) removed 99% of coliforms, E. coli and MS2 phages.

55. Newest developments in Abzymes technology exploit combinatorial libraries displayed on the surface of phages, a method which enormously enlarge the possible size of the library.

56. A large subset of phages infect Bactericidally and, consequently, for nearly one hundred years have been employed as antibacterial agents both within and outside of medicine

57. An example of a Bacteriophage known to follow the lysogenic cycle and the lytic cycle is the phage lambda of E

58. Bacteriophage, also called phage or bacterial virus, any of a group of viruses that infect bacteria. Bacteriophages were discovered independently by Frederick W

59. Using viruses instead of antibiotics to tame troublesome drug-resistant bacteria is a promising strategy, known as Bacteriophage or "phage therapy." Scientists at the National Institutes of …

60. Bacteriophages, called phages for short, were discovered independently by Frederick Twort in 1915 and Félix d’Herelle in 1917, over a decade before penicillin, the most well known antibiotic

61. The ability of N-methyl-N′-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine to effect breakdown of superhelical phage DNA in alkali was found enhanced in the presence of N-acetyl-cysteine.

62. When the crystals do not mesh properly, the occasional atom will jut out where it should not, creating a defect to which a phage can stick.

63. Bacteriophage (phage) are obligate intracellular parasites that multiply inside bacteria by making use of some or all of the host biosynthetic machinery (i.e., viruses that infect bacteria.)

64. A large human phage antibody library was subjected for panning with leukocytes from healthy donors and leukemia patients to select for specific antibodies against leukocytic surface proteins.

65. The organisms addressed include plants, insects, fungi, bacteria and phages. Bioprospecting has never been more relevant and is of renewed interest, because of the extremely worrying rise in novel, resistant pathogenic microorganisms

66. Columnare phage FCP1 (made of hexagonal head and non contractile long tail belonging to family Podovariedae, a member of DNA virus) exhibited broader host range to lyse 9 …

67. 16 A large human phage antibody library was subjected for panning with leukocytes from healthy donors and leukemia patients to select for specific antibodies against leukocytic surface proteins.

68. The successful display of hirudin on the surface of M13 phage laid a sound foundation for the further study on directed evolution of antithrombotic proteins with altered properties.

69. Phage adsorbed to both productive and non-productive sensitive hosts but not to non-sensitive controls, nor to host cells treated with NaCN, or cells killed by ultraviolet (UV), heat, formaldehyde, or desiccation.

70. The Collection comprises seven sections organized according to taxonomic or functional criteria: (1) fungi, (2) yeasts, (3) actinomycetes, (4) industrial bacteria, (5) genetically-marked bacteria, (6) phages, (7) producers of ferments from nucleic acid exchange.

71. Capsid A protein coat that covers the nucleoprotein core or nucleic acid (RNA, DNA) of a free virus particle or phage, which may have icosahedral symmetry and itself be enclosed in an envelope—e.g., Togaviridae

72. A bacteriophage is a virus that infects bacteria A bacteriophage, or phage for short, is a virus that infects bacteria. Like other types of viruses, Bacteriophages vary a lot in their shape and genetic material

73. Coli λ lysogen second infectionWhat is the most likely outcome of the ?Why? 2)A λ phage in which OR1 and OR2 carry point mutations Adsorbs to and then successfully transfers its DNA into an E

74. Construction of libraries implementing these Correctives results in markedly improved libraries that display random distribution of amino acids, thus ensuring that enriched peptides obtained in biopanning represent a genuine selection event, a fundamental assumption for phage display applications.

75. Noun a virus that is parasitic in a bacterium and multiplies within its host, which is destroyed when the new viruses are releasedOften shortened to: phage Derived forms of bacteriophage Bacteriophagic (bækˌtɪərɪəˈfædʒɪk), adjective bacteriophagous (bækˌtɪərɪˈɒfəɡəs), adjective