Results 281 to 290 of about 53,999 (295)
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The Missing Cilia

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1976
Bjorn A. Afzelius, 1 who for many years has been interested in cilia of one sort or another, describes in a recent issue of Science a bizarre, inborn disorder in four men who, while seeming to possess respectable sperms, have nothing with which to propel them. The sperm are immobile.
openaire   +3 more sources

The cilia of Tetrahymena pyriformis

Experimental Cell Research, 1964
Summary Improved methods of culture and isolation have resulted in the production of 200 mg amounts of segmented cilia from Tetrahymena pyriformis The cilia were inoculated subcutaneously into rabbits, and produced strain-specific immobilizing antisera.
N. R. Silvester   +2 more
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Recurrent Pterygium with Cilia Mimicking Ectopic Cilia

International Journal of Ophthalmic & Pathology, 2013
We report a very rare case with recurrent pterygium with cilia mimicking ectopic cilia. The history of the  patient revealed prior pterygium excision operations. A slit-lamb examination revealed the recurrent pterygium with cilia in the nasal region. In the nasal region, the caruncular tissue which normally has cilia dragged by the residual base of the
ÇATAK, ONUR   +3 more
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Zebrafish Cilia

2013
Zebrafish are ideally suited for analysis of genes required for ciliogenesis and cilia function. Combining genetic manipulation with high quality in vivo imaging, zebrafish embryos provide a high-throughput system for annotation of the cilia proteome.
Iain A. Drummond, Christina Austin-Tse
openaire   +3 more sources

Ultrastructure of cilia in horses.

Journal of submicroscopic cytology and pathology, 1992
This paper presents some ultrastructural details of cilia from the ciliated tracheal epithelium of healthy horses. By using a new fixation method, the Authors were able to describe minute details, some of which have been only rarely observed in other species and mostly by means of the freeze-etch technique (i.e.
ROPERTO, FRANCO PEPPINO   +4 more
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When cilia go bad: cilia defects and ciliopathies

Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology, 2007
Defects in the function of cellular organelles such as peroxisomes, lysosomes and mitochondria are well-known causes of human diseases. Recently, another organelle has also been added to this list. Cilia--tiny hair-like organelles attached to the cell surface--are located on almost all polarized cell types of the human body and have been adapted as ...
Fliegauf, Manfred   +2 more
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Undulipodia, flagella and cilia

Biosystems, 1980
The term flagella is ambiguous. It refers to bacterial structures composed of flagellin protein and to eukaryotic structures composed of microtubule proteins and ATPase (tubulin and dynein). The fact that cilia are nearly identical to eukaryotic flagella and have nothing in common with prokaryotic flagella is not apparent from the terminology.
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Cilia and Cystic Fibrosis

New England Journal of Medicine, 1973
Physicians who treat children with cystic fibrosis or the increasing numbers of adults with the disease will perhaps be bemused by a paper by Sanchis and his co-workers in this week's Journal.
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Cilia

Scientific American, 1961
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MOTILE CILIA IN "IMMOTILE CILIA" SYNDROME

The Lancet, 1980
Carol M. Rossman   +2 more
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