Antibiotic
... host. Antibiotics are not effective in viral ,
fungal and other nonbacterial infections, and ... plates, one of which was ruined by an accidental
fungal contamination. Rather than discarding the ... proved much harder to duplicate with respect to
fungal and viral infections. Antibiotic research led to ...
Fungus
... are uncertain.
Reproduction
Sexual
fungal mycelia are typically haploid . When mycelia of ... are propelled by a posterior flagellum , all
fungal spores are non-motile. They develop into new ... organic molecules are then absorbed by the
fungal cells. Fungi are also considered to be ...
Lichen
... fungi . Lichens take the external shape of the
fungal partner and hence are named based on the fungus. ... The upper layer is formed by densely agglutinated
fungal hyphae building a protective outer layer called ... algal cells embedded in rather densely interwoven
fungal hyphae. Each cell or group of cells of the ...
Mycology
... carbon cycle .
Fungi and other organisms traditionally recognized as
fungal often are economically and socially important as they are responsible for ... British Mycological Society (United Kingdom)
Centre for Research in
fungal Diversity (Hong Kong, China)
Amateur organizations
North ...
Alexander Fleming
... , he was sorting through the many idle experiments strewn about his lab. He inspected each specimen before discarding it and noticed an interesting
fungal colony had grown as a contaminant on one of the agar plates streaked with the bacterium Staphylococcus aureus . Fleming inspected the Petri ...
Bacterium
... only 0.5-5.0 μm in size, though one type may reach 0.3 mm in diameter ( Thiomargarita ). They generally have cell walls , like plant and
fungal cells , but with a very different composition ( peptidoglycans ). Many move around using flagella , which are different in structure from the ...
Diabetes mellitus
... frequently caused by diabetes, such as a heart attack , stroke , neuropathy , poor wound healing or a foot ulcer, certain eye problems, certain
fungal infections , or delivering a baby with macrosomia or hypoglycemia .
Criteria for diagnosis
Diabetes mellitus is characterized by ...
Bacterium
... only 0.5-5.0 μm in size, though one type may reach 0.3 mm in diameter ( Thiomargarita ). They generally have cell walls , like plant and
fungal cells , but with a very different composition ( peptidoglycans ). Many move around using flagella , which are different in structure from the ...
Fermentation
... breaks down gummy beta-glucans in the mash, making the sugars flow out more freely later in the process. In the modern mashing process commercial
fungal based beta-glucanase may be added as a supplement. A mash rest from 120F to 130 F (49C to 55C) activates various proteinases , which break down ...
Prion
... syndrome (GSS) Humans GSS prion HuPrP Sc
Fatal familial insomnia (FFI) Humans FFI prion HuPrP Sc
* or variant
fungal prion
Protein
Natural host
Prion name
Ure2p Saccharomyces cerevisiae [URE2+] prion
Sup35p Saccharomyces cerevisiae ...
Skin
... Benign tumors of the skin: Squamous cell papilloma
Skin cancer
Others :
Rashes
Blisters
Acne
Keratosis pilaris
fungal infections such as athlete's foot
microbial infections.
calcinosis cutis
ulcer
list of skin diseases
See also
...
Virus classification
... RNAs
Subgroup 1: Large satellite RNAs
Subgroup 2: Small linear satellite RNAs
Subgroup 3: Circular satellite RNAs
Prions
fungal prions
Mamalian prions
Other resources
External links
ICTV Index of Viruses
Up-to-date 8th ICTV Index classification
See ...