bacteriolysis

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bacteriolysis
bacteriolysis (bæktɪərɪˈɒlɪsɪs) [f. bacterio-, combining form of bacterium + Gr. λύσις dissolution.] 1. A name proposed for the artificial liquefaction of solid organic matter in sewage by means of certain bacteria.1895 W. E. Adeney in Sci. Trans. R. Dublin Soc. Sept. 544 Fermentation of gelatin, or... Oxford English Dictionary
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bacteriophage
bacteriophage Biol. (bækˈtɪərɪəʊfeɪdʒ, -fɑːʒ) [ad. F. bactériophage (F. d'Herelle 1917, in Comptes Rendus CLXV. 375), f. as bacteriolysis + -phage.] A minute organism or agent which destroys bacteria. Hence ˌbacteriˈophagy, the action of a bacteriophage; bacˌterioˈphagal, -ˈphagic adjs., of, pertain... Oxford English Dictionary
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Clostridium novyi-NT
Bacteriolysis in hypoxic tumor parts can be combined with chemotherapy and/or radiation that are more effective in proliferating, non-hypoxic areas at wikipedia.org
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bacteriolytic
bacteriolytic, a. (bækˌtɪərɪəʊˈlɪtɪk) [Formed as prec. + Gr. λυτικός able to dissolve.] Capable of causing the destruction of bacteria; pertaining to or of the nature of bacteriolysis.1900 in Dorland Med. Dict. 1901 Dunglison Med. Dict. Suppl., Bacteriolytic, producing decomposition of bacteria. 190... Oxford English Dictionary
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Richard Friedrich Johannes Pfeiffer
Career Pfeiffer is remembered for his many fundamental discoveries in immunology and bacteriology, particularly for the phenomenon of bacteriolysis. He called this bacteriolysis and it became known as the Pfeiffer Phenomenon, or Isayev-Pfeiffer phenomenon. wikipedia.org
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bacteriolysin
bacteriolysin (bæktɪərɪˈɒlɪsɪn, bækˌtɪərɪəʊˈlaɪsɪn) Also erron. -ine. [Formed as next + -in1.] A substance formed in the body during an infectious disease which has the property of destroying the specific bacterium of the disease.1900 tr. P. Ehrlich Immunity in Proc. R. Soc. LXVI. 441 The specific b... Oxford English Dictionary
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Chédiak–Higashi syndrome
Pathophysiology CHS is a disease causing impaired bacteriolysis due to failure of phagolysosome formation. wikipedia.org
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Liang Tong
and experiments at the cellular level showed that metabolic balance mediated by c-di-AMP affected intracellular growth of L. monocytogenes by causing bacteriolysis wikipedia.org
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-lysis
-lysis (lɪsɪs) A word-forming element [f. Gr. λύσις a loosening, parting] in many technical terms, primarily denoting decomposition, disintegration, dissolution. 1. In words in which the first element indicates the agent; e.g. (in Chem.) electrolysis (c 1840), hydrogenolysis; (in Biol.) bacteriolysi... Oxford English Dictionary
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List of MeSH codes (G04)
– host-parasite relations – microbiologic phenomena – antibiosis – bacterial physiology – bacterial adhesion – bacterial translocation – bacteriolysis wikipedia.org
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lysis
‖ lysis (ˈlaɪsɪs) [L. lysis, Gr. λύσις a loosening.] 1. Arch. ‘A plinth or step above the cornice of the podium of ancient temples, which surrounded or embraced the stylobate’ (Gwilt Archit. 1842).1847 J. Leitch tr. C.O. Müller's Anc. Art §280. 270 The lysis above the corona of a short pillar, of wh... Oxford English Dictionary
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Timeline of immunology
Coley) 1894 – Bacteriolysis (Richard Pfeiffer) 1896 – An antibacterial, heat-labile serum component (complement) is described (Jules Bordet) 1900 – wikipedia.org
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Antibody
Second, some complement system components form a membrane attack complex to assist antibodies to kill the bacterium directly (bacteriolysis). wikipedia.org
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