Navigation Links
Host


host
an organism in or on which a parasite lives
Source: Noland, George B. 1983. General Biology, 11th Edition. St. Louis, MO. C. V. Mosby ...
Full article >>>

In biology, a host is an organism that harbors a virus, parasite, mutual partner, or commensal partner, typically providing nourishment and shelter.
Full article >>>

1. The spectrum of strains of bacterial species that a given strain of phage can infect.
2. The range of cells that can act as a host to a virus or bacteriophage.
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z ...
Full article >>>

Host (biology)
In biology, a host is an organism that harbors a parasite, mutual partner, or commensal partner, typically providing nourishment and shelter.
Full article >>>

host cells that have become infected with virus;
host cells that have become cancerous.
Features of NK Cells
The specificity of the receptors with which NK cells recognize potential targets are NOT diversified like the ...
Full article >>>

host -- Organism which serves as the habitat for a parasite, or possibly for a symbiont. A host may provide nutrition to the parasite or symbiont, or simply a place in which to live.
Full article >>>

Host: The organism in or on which a parasitoid lives; a plant on which an insect feeds.
Host plant resistance: The relative amount of heritable qualities possessed by a plant that reduces the degree of damage to the plant by a pest or pests.
Full article >>>

Host-range
The strain or species specificity of a bacteriophage, plasmid, or pathogen.
Hot spot
A region that is especially susceptible to mutations. Mutations occur at such sites at a much higher frequency than most other positions in the genome.
Full article >>>

host
(1) An organism on or in which a parasite lives. (2) A recipient of grafted tissue.
Human Genome Project ...
Full article >>>

host. A plant or animal that provides sustenance for another organism.
hypha (plural: hyphae). One of the filaments forming the body, or mycelium, of a fungus.
Full article >>>

host specificity Degree to which a parasite is able to mature in more than one host species.
host An animal or protist that harbors or nourishes another organism (parasite).
Full article >>>

Host. An organism that contains another organism.
Human Genome Project. A project coordinated by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the Department of Energy (DOE) to determine the entire nucleotide sequence of the human chromosomes. (See NIH.
Full article >>>

Host strain (bacterial): The bacterium used to harbor a plasmid. Typical host strains include HB101 (general purpose E. coli strain), DH5a (ditto), JM101 and JM109 (suitable for growing M13 phages), XL1-Blue (general-purpose, ...
Full article >>>

The host cell wall to ruptures releasing the newly formed viruses.
Upon entering the cell, the viral DNA may instead, become integrated into the bacterial DNA. It is replicated along with the host DNA when the host reproduces.
Full article >>>

New Host Strains for Stabilization and Modification of YAC Clones
60. Direct Isolation of a Centromeric Region from a Human Mini-Chromosome by in Vivo Recombination in Yeast
63.
Full article >>>

Athens was host to the 2004 Summer Olympics. Athens was also the host of the 1896 Olympics and of the 1906 Intermediary Olympics.
Full article >>>

Absorb food from a host or from their environment.
All heterotrophic.
Single-celled, filamentous, to multicelled; all eukaryotic.
Full article >>>

To increase the number of copies of a DNA sequence, in vivo by inserting into a cloning vector that replicates within a host cell, or in vitro by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Anaerobe. An organism that grows in the absence of oxygen. See Aerobe.
Full article >>>

Bacteriophage -- a virus whose host is a bacterium; commonly called phage. Barr body -- the condensed single X-chromosome seen in the nuclei of somatic cells of female mammals.
Full article >>>

Epiphyte a plant which uses a rock or host plant merely as a place of residence and obtains its moisture and nutrients directly from the air; an air plant. A type of growthform.
Full article >>>

temperate phage A phage whose DNA may be incorporated into the host-cell genome without being expressed. Contrast with a virulent phage, which destroys the host cell. template A macromolecular pattern for the synthesis of another molecule.
Full article >>>

Artificial chromosome A vector constructed from host cell chromosomal elements such as origin of replication, telomeres and centromere (in eukaryotes).
Full article >>>

Its normal host is the hawthorn tree. Sometime during the nineteenth century it began to infest apple trees. Since then it has begun to infest cherries, roses, pears and possibly other members of the rosaceae.
Full article >>>

Executives in Charge of Production David Davis and Jack Galmiche; Executive Producer Meighan Maloney; Producer/Writers Melissa Gerr, Nadine Jelsing, Amanda Lowthian, and Eric Slade; Writer Andrew Holtz; Series Host Lew Frederick; ...
Full article >>>

Phagocytes utilize an NADPH oxidase to generate large amounts of ROS, and exploit their toxic properties as a host-defence mechanism to kill invading microbes.
Full article >>>

In G inversion the orientation of Mu phage G segment determines tail fibre expression and thus host range (E.coli or Citrobacter). A similar variation in tail fiber expression is due to Cin in bacteriophage P.
Full article >>>

A noncellular biological entity that can reproduce only within a host cell. Viruses consist of nucleic acid covered by protein; some animal viruses are also surrounded by membrane.
Full article >>>

viruses - obligate intracellular parasites that require the host cell's biochemical machinery to drive protein synthesis and metabolize sugars.
Full article >>>

For bacteria and yeasts, transformation refers to the techniques of introducing plasmid or other vectors into a host cell.
Full article >>>

A particle consisting of a nucleic acid (RNA or DNA) genome surrounded by a protein coat (capsid) and sometimes also a membrane, which can replicate only after infecting a host cell.
Full article >>>

Bacteriophage: A virus whose host is a bacterium. Also called phage.
Base: See nitrogenous base.
Full article >>>

Virus: A noncellular biological entity that can reproduce only within a host cell.
The Exploratorium, 3601 Lyon Street, San Francisco, CA 94123 ...
Full article >>>

Bacteriophage a type of virus that invades lives in and kills a host species of bacterium
(phago = to eat) ...
Full article >>>

Large segments of DNA, 100,000 to 200,000 bases, from another species cloned into bacteria. Once the foreign DNA has been cloned into the host bacteria, many copies of it can be made.
explained:
Listen to a detailed explanation.
Full article >>>

TRANSLATION - The process whereby mRNA directs the synthesis of a protein molecule; carried out by the ribosome in association with a host of translation initiation, elongation and termination factors.
Full article >>>

histocompatibility antigens - cell surface glycoproteins that differ from individual to individual; their recognition as foreign by a host organism is responsible for rejection of grafted foreign tissue.
Full article >>>

: Joint evolution of two unrelated species that have a close ecological relationship resulting in reciprocal adaptations as happens between host and parasite, and plant and insect.
Cognate molecule ...
Full article >>>

scolex
The head of a tapeworm, found at the anterior end. It has hooks and suckers for attachment to it's host.
Covered in Lab 11 Animal Diversity I ...
Full article >>>


'"/>


See more about: Host

TAG: Host
Other biology dictionary
(Date:8/7/2008)...logy, Asterion Ltd., has led to new technology tha...to tackle major diseases such as cancer, diabetes ...he University of Sheffield in laboratories support...search Council (BBSRC). This work is reported in ...erly research highlights magazine of the Biotechno...
(Date:8/6/2008)...nd University of Sao Paulo today announced a joint... safe, building block chemical derived from corn k...ks a step forward in developing applications and m...ment gives us the exclusive right to work with com... to incorporate isosorbide into many products," sa...
(Date:8/6/2008)...ve shown how bacteria could be used as a future fu...ormatics, could have significant implications for...e fuels in the future. , Like all living creatur...bolism, a huge sequence of chemical reactions that...sing mathematical computer models, the Sheffield t...
(Date:8/6/2008)...old ideas about water behavior are all wet., Ubiq...ts, on Mars and in molecular clouds in interstella...not as well understood as we thought., "Water, as...id Martin Gruebele, a William H. and Janet Lycan P...s. "Water in our bodies has different physical pro...
Breaking Biology News(10 mins):Structural biology spin-out tackles major diseases 2Iowa Corn Promotion Board, NJIT to license breakthrough, safe bio-plastic alternative 2Water is 'designer fluid' that helps proteins change shape, scientists say 2EntreMed Commences Phase 2 Study With MKC 1 in Ovarian Endometrial Cancers 1253 1EntreMed Commences Phase 2 Study With MKC 1 in Ovarian Endometrial Cancers 1253 2EntreMed Commences Phase 2 Study With MKC 1 in Ovarian Endometrial Cancers 1253 3EntreMed Commences Phase 2 Study With MKC 1 in Ovarian Endometrial Cancers 1253 4Peregrine Pharmaceuticals Receives Approval to Conduct a Second Phase II Trial of Bavituximab in Patients With Advanced Breast Cancer 1250 1Peregrine Pharmaceuticals Receives Approval to Conduct a Second Phase II Trial of Bavituximab in Patients With Advanced Breast Cancer 1250 2Peregrine Pharmaceuticals Receives Approval to Conduct a Second Phase II Trial of Bavituximab in Patients With Advanced Breast Cancer 1250 3Peregrine Pharmaceuticals Receives Approval to Conduct a Second Phase II Trial of Bavituximab in Patients With Advanced Breast Cancer 1250 4Genetics May Determine Antidepressants Effectiveness 9957 1Genetics May Determine Antidepressants Effectiveness 9957 2AASM statement on use of sleep medications 9954 1AASM statement on use of sleep medications 9954 2AASM statement on use of sleep medications 9954 3
...ersity of Utah researchers showed that a fruit fly...gin to mature into adults, and how the transformat... in humans may help explain how adorable children ...sabled, fruit flies prematurely begin metamorphosi... active adult. It is the first genetic mutation fo...
... Laboratory researchers explore new frontier of me... scientists genetic roadmaps to link certain genes...duced by certain genes spawned the field of proteo...partment of Energy,s Ames Laboratory at Iowa State... funding to begin understanding the chemical proce...
...new surgical assistant at the University of North ...ree arms, a computerized brain and a glowing track...cancerous prostates, bypass blocked coronary arter...id obesity. , The new arrival is a robotic machine...tuitive Surgical. UNC currently is the only gyneco...
...way aquatic plants respond to plant disease and cl...nd-based agriculture, say plant pathologists with ...cording to David Schmale III, Cornell University, ...hanisms of resistance to microbial attack. "Throug... apply the novel mechanisms found in aquatic plant...
Other Biology News:Scientists find a maturity gene in fly 2Scientists find a maturity gene in fly 3Scientists find a maturity gene in fly 4Making plant cells work like miniature factories 2Making plant cells work like miniature factories 3Surgical Robot 'Scrubs In' At UNC, May Be More Precise Than Conventional Surgery 2Surgical Robot 'Scrubs In' At UNC, May Be More Precise Than Conventional Surgery 3