Results 321 to 330 of about 3,697,088 (383)

Natural competence in the bacterial pathogen Xylella fastidiosa varies across genotypes and is associated with adhesins. [PDF]

open access: yesPLoS Pathog
Liu R   +8 more
europepmc   +1 more source
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SARS-CoV-2 biology and host interactions

Nature Reviews Microbiology
The zoonotic emergence of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) and the ensuing coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic have profoundly affected our society. The rapid spread and continuous evolution of new SARS-CoV-2 variants continue to threaten global public health.
Silvio Steiner   +7 more
semanticscholar   +3 more sources

Host–Pathogen Systems Biology

Drug Discovery Today, 2006
Unlike traditional biological research that focuses on a small set of components, systems biology studies the complex interactions between a large number of genes, proteins and other elements of biological networks and systems. Host-pathogen systems biology examines the interactions between the components of two distinct organisms, either a microbial ...
openaire   +2 more sources

The Biology of Viroid-Host Interactions

Annual Review of Phytopathology, 2009
Viroids are single-stranded, circular, and noncoding RNAs that infect plants. They replicate in the nucleus or chloroplast and then traffic cell-to-cell through plasmodesmata and long distance through the phloem to establish systemic infection. They also cause diseases in certain hosts.
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Ascariasis: Host-Pathogen Biology

Clinical Infectious Diseases, 1982
Ascaris lumbricoides is one of the most common intestinal parasites in humans. Daily global contamination of the soil by A. lumbricoides eggs is enormous (approximately 9 x 10(14) eggs/day). Physical factors, particularly temperature and moisture, are critical in determining the maturation of eggs to the infective stage and their survival. Transmission
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Malaria: Host-Pathogen Biology

Clinical Infectious Diseases, 1982
The development of resistance to insecticides by anopheline mosquito vectors of malaria and of resistance to drugs by Plasmodium falciparum pose new challenges for malaria control programs. The establishment of methods for the continuous cultivation in vitro of plasmodia provided an important new tool for research into the cellular biology and ...
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Giardiasis: Host-Pathogen Biology

Clinical Infectious Diseases, 1982
Giardiasis is the most common waterborne diarrheal disease in the United States and is highly prevalent throughout the world. The clinical spectrum of disease ranges from asymptomatic infection to persistent severe malabsorption. The precise interaction between Giardia and its human host remains conjectural because of the paucity of published studies ...
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Biology and Host Relationships

1967
It is well known that aphidiids are all primary, solitary, internal parasites of aphids. Many excellent papers on biology, ecology and host relationships of the Aphidiidae have appeared within the past few years, and even though it is not our intent to review or discuss these subjects to any great degree, it seems important to mention some of them, as ...
Peter Stary, Evert I. Schlinger
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Schistosomiasis: Host-Pathogen Biology

Clinical Infectious Diseases, 1982
Schistosomes are helminths of the class Trematoda that alternate generations, with a sexual phase in definitive mammalian hosts and an asexual phase in intermediate snail hosts. In humans, these blood flukes reside in the mesenteric and vesical venules. They have a life span of many years and daily produce large numbers of eggs, which must traverse the
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Biology of host-macroparasite associations

1991
Abstract Many important diseases of humans, particularly in tropical and subtropical regions, arise from infection by macroparasites or metazoan (multicellular) organisms. The major parasites belong to the helminth and arthropod groups, and include flukes (the trematodes), tapeworms (the cestodes), nematodes, lice, fleas, and ticks ...
Roy M Anderson, Robert M May
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