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Supplementary Materials and Methods Transfection and expression
Supplementary Materials and Methods Transfection and expression

... Splenocytes were added to a 96-well plate (1x105/well) and were stimulated with pooled HPV16 E6/E7 pooled peptide for 5-6 hours at 37C/5% CO2 in the presence of Protein Transport Inhibitor Cocktail (Brefeldin A and Monensin) (eBioscience) according to the manufacturers instructions. The Cell Stimula ...
3-D Cell Model Evaluation Rubric
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... This rubric is used to verify specific tasks performed when constructing this model. If the task has been successfully completed with quality, all points are awarded; poor quality work will reduce the scores at instructor’s discretion. No points are awar ded if the task is not complete. ...
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Diffusion and Osmosis
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... b. all life is made up of one or more cells c. all cells come from preexisting cells d. all cells are identical in function and structure ______13. Identify the organelle in the Cell diagram as # 9 (figure 1) a. centriole b. nucleus c. ribosomes d. mitochondria ...
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Transport Across Cell Membranes

... molecules, such as glucose and amino acids, combine to specific carrier proteins. These carriers then change conformation and the molecules are released to the other side. They move along their concentration gradient (high to low). This does not require energy and is therefore classified as passive ...
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... lysing its host cell or budding from the host cell membrane forming a plaque or a colony _____ Antiviral drug therapy ideally should target viral activities that are unique to the virus. One of these targets is the process or attachment. A fairly new anti-influenza drug targets _____ a protein on th ...
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... Drugs That Target Bacterial Cells • Antibiotics were first isolated from mold in 1928. • The widespread use of antibiotics drastically decreased deaths from bacterial infections. • Most antibiotics kill bacteria while minimally harming the human host by binding to structures found only on bacterial ...
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... own as well as in several other laboratories, showing that fusicoccin is indeed an important tool for the study of growth regulation, electrogenesis, and transport. The recognition of a receptor for this toxin in the plasma membrane was followed bythe recent demonstration 4 of the in vitro action of ...
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Signal transduction



Signal transduction occurs when an extracellular signaling molecule activates a specific receptor located on the cell surface or inside the cell. In turn, this receptor triggers a biochemical chain of events inside the cell, creating a response. Depending on the cell, the response alters the cell's metabolism, shape, gene expression, or ability to divide. The signal can be amplified at any step. Thus, one signaling molecule can cause many responses.
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