Lysis
...
lysis ( Greek lusis from luein = to separate) is ... more specifically as cytolysis
osmotic
lysis
chemical
lysis
...
Lytic cycle
...
1 Description
1.1 Infection
1.2 Growth
1.3 Replication and
lysis
Description
The lytic cycle is a three-stage process.
... into DNA, which is then transcribed again into mRNA.
Replication and
lysis
After many virus copies are made, they are assembled into complete ...
Alexander Fleming
... Fleming inspected the Petri dish further and found that the bacterial colonies around the fungus were transparent because their cells were lysing .
lysis is the breakdown of cells, and in this case, potentially harmful bacteria. The importance was immediately recognized, however the discovery was ...
Antibody
... to various cell receptors and complement proteins. In this way it mediates different physiological effects of antibodies ( opsonization , cell
lysis , mast cell, basophil and eosinophil degranulation and other processes).
The variable regions of the heavy and light chains can be fused together ...
Antigen
... with class I histocompatibility molecules . If cytotoxic CD8 + T cells recognize them, they begin to secrete different toxins that cause the
lysis or apoptosis of the infected cell. In order to keep the cytotoxic cells from killing cells just for presenting normal proteins, they run through a ...
Glycolysis
... in the formation of ATP. These two reactions pull the glycolytic pathway to completion.
Etymology
From Greek glyk meaning sweet and
lysis meaning dissolving.
See also
Gluconeogenesis
Krebs cycle
Anaerobic respiration
External links
The Glycolytic enzymes in ...
Peptide
... a wide array of functions, many of which are not yet understood.
Antimicrobial peptides generally disrupt the membranes of a target cell, causing
lysis of the cell. How this occurs, and what determines the activity and selectivity of these peptides, is currently only known approximately.
It has ...
Phage
... of stress (meaning it might be about to die soon), the endogenous phages become active again and start their reproductive cycle, resulting in the
lysis of the host cell. An example is phage λ of E. coli . Sometimes, prophages even provide benefit to the host bacterium while they are ...
Peptide
... a wide array of functions, many of which are not yet understood.
Antimicrobial peptides generally disrupt the membranes of a target cell, causing
lysis of the cell. How this occurs, and what determines the activity and selectivity of these peptides, is currently only known approximately.
It has ...
Virus
... , or proteins made by the host that help the capsid parts come together.
The new viruses then leave the cell either by exocytosis or by
lysis . Envelope-bound animal viruses instruct the host's endoplasmic reticulum to make certain proteins, called glycoproteins , which then collect in ...