pestis

NOUN
  1. a serious (sometimes fatal) infection of rodents caused by Yersinia pestis and accidentally transmitted to humans by the bite of a flea that has bitten an infected animal
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How To Use pestis In A Sentence

  • Yersinia pestis in the 109 samples from the cemetery in East Smithfield, his lab employed a sort of sensitive fishing technique, using tiny segments of DNA that matched up with segments from a ring of DNA, called a plasmid, found in the bacterium. Yahoo! News: Business - Opinion
  • Despite this advance, one should still Yersinia pestis like , well, the plague.
  • In search of a possible explanation for the attenuation of Kim53Δ nlpD, we evaluated the involvement of Y. pestis NlpD in resistance to prolonged growth in rich (HIB) and minimal (M9) broth, and in acidic and oxidative conditions that simulate the intra-phagosomal milieu. PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles
  • Y. pestis is typically transmitted through the bite of an infected flea and causes bubonic and/or septicemic plague PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles
  • Conclusions The PCR with internal comparison is one of Methods : To detect Y . pestis DNA.
  • Another plague that really made the “dark” Middle Ages dark was the Black Death, or bubonic plague, which is caused by the bacterium Yersinia Pasteurella pestis. Modern Science in the Bible
  • The plague bacillus used to be called Pasteurella pestis instead of Yersinia pestis because Yersin isolated it while working at Pasteur’s institute. The Mosasaur and the missing link - The Panda's Thumb
  • The term pest derives from the Latin pestis for plague and is used to describe plants (weeds), vertebrates, insects, mites, pathogens and other organisms that occur where we do not want them. Undefined
  • Examples include the protozoan Leishmania in sandflies, the plague bacterium Yersinia pestis transmitted by the tropical rat flea Xenopsylla cheopis, and trypanosomes in tse-tse flies.
  • Jackson and Plano (2000) report that the Yersinia pestis FliH homolog YscL (corresponding to SctL/HrpE in Figure 4a) has low but significant sequence similarity with the e subunit of the archaeal ATPase of Methanococcus jannaschii and the e subunit of the vacuolar ATPase of Desulfurococcus spp.; these subunits are the homologs of the b subunit of the F1F0-ATP synthetase. Congratulations are in Order
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