Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
They're looking for foreign proteins, but there's some doubt as to whether the resolution's up to it.
These samples can be tested to see if they recognize a foreign protein.
"Because she grew up in Western society, her body has probably never seen mother's milk - it's a foreign protein."
It provides an efficient platform for the production of foreign proteins.
First we explain how a yeast becomes a producer of foreign proteins.
T cells that recognize foreign proteins are released into the general circulation.
Your immune system blocks foreign proteins from getting into your body.
Tannins may also help break down foreign proteins, which could reduce the allergic response.
Several of them are also applied to genetic engineering and to the production of foreign proteins.
When a white blood cell recognizes a foreign protein, it multiplies to form a clone.
The patients with aplasia are forming antibodies to attack the drug as if it were a foreign protein.
Each cell in the clone produces an identical antibody to attack the foreign protein.
On the other hand it is a very robust and safe organism that can be genetically engineered to produce foreign proteins.
Yields in a multi gram range of a secreted foreign protein have been reported.
His pilot study showed that not only did the cells survive, but they also homed in on tumors and produced a foreign protein there.
As food-grade bacteria, they are used in the production of foreign proteins that are applied to the food industry.
Hormones, foreign proteins, water injections, impurities and harmful bacteria - they will all sound familiar to you.
To produce monoclonal antibodies artificially in mice, the scientists injected them with foreign proteins.
Since the foreign proteins are so similar to normal brain proteins, they presumably slip through the immune system's net.
Apparently the foreign protein, or other substance, which sparks the allergic reaction does so by stimulating the production of histamine.
Antibodies seek and attach to foreign proteins, microorganisms, or toxins in order to neutralize them.
Antibodies are usually raised against foreign proteins, such as those made by a replicating virus or invading bacterium.
Breaking a maggot within the victim releases large amounts of foreign protein, which can result in shock, anaphylaxis and even death.
Proof of their success would be evidence that the cell was manufacturing the foreign protein coded for by the DNA.
Antibodies are the body's first line of defense, latching onto foreign proteins on the surface of bacteria or viruses.