Human Anatomy
Tubercles
A characteristic feature of tuberculosis is the formation of small, hard nodules called ~ in the lungs.
Monoclonal antibodies
A common pregnancy test uses ~ ~ to detect the hormone HCG in a woman's urine.
Scrapie
A disease of sheep.
Epidemic
A higher than normal occurrence of disease in a certain area over a given period of time.
Vector
A living organism, such as a mosquito, that transfers a pathogen from one host to another is a ~.
Virus
A microbe that is a parasite of cells that itself is acellular and bridges the gap between the living and nonliving.
Delayed allergic response
An allergic response that is initiated by memory T cells at the site of allergen contact in the body is a(n) ~ ~ ~.
Outbreak
An epidemic that is confined to a local area
Emerging diseases
Avian Influenza (H5N1), Middle East Respiratory syndrome (MERS), and Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) are each ~ ~.
Encode
Be responsible for producing.
Prophylactically
Before infection.
Encephalopathy
Brain is affected by some agent.
Campylobacter jejuni
Curved-shaped bacterium that causes food poisoning.
Chronic phase
Early symptoms of illness become constant.
Gp120
Envelope Glycoprotein 120
Protease
Enzyme encoded by HIV genome that breaks down viral polypeptides into functional proteins.
Reverse transcriptase
Enzyme encoded by HIV genome that converts viral RNA into viral DNA.
Integrase
Enzyme encoded by HIV genome that inserts viral DNA into host cell DNA
Plasmids
Genes coding for antibiotic resistance in bacteria are often located on small, circular pieces of DNA called ~.
Retroviruses
HIV belongs to this group of viruses, all of which use reverse transcriptase to convert viral RNA into DNA.
Acute phase
HIV-1B undergoes prolific replication.
Spongiform
Having a porous structure similar to that of a sponge.
Pentamer
IgM antibodies have this structure.
First responders
Immune defense of phagocytic white blood cells.
Acquired defenses
Immune defense that kills infectious agents that gain access to the body; protects against cancer.
Prions
Infectious particles made of protein only.
Antibody-mediated immunity
Involves defense of the body by B cells and plasma cells.
Pili
Many bacteria have hollow appendages called ~ that can transfer DNA between cells.
Flagella
Motile bacteria usually have one or more long, thin cellular appendages called ~.
Provirus
Once HIV RNA is reverse transcribed into HIV DNA and integrated into the DNA of a host cell, the viral DNA is called a(n) ~.
Prolific
Plentiful.
Binary fission
Process by which bacteria reproduce.
Biosynthesis
Production of complex molecules within living organisms or cells.
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Rod-shaped bacterium that causes urinary tract infections.
Plasmodium falciparum
Species of protists causing malaria that causes most disease and death.
Staphylococcus aureus
Sphere-shaoed bacterium that causes toxic shock syndrome.
Bacteria
Strep throat, tetanus, tuberculosis, and syphilis are all caused by ~.
AIDS phase
T cell count drops below 200 cells per milliliter.
Capsule
The cell wall of some bacteria is surrounded by a thick, gelatinous ~ that may help the bacteria to stick to surfaces.
CD4 cells
The helper T cells and macrophages infected by HIV are called ~ ~, because they display a molecule called CD4 (cluster of differentiation 4) on their surface.
Viral load
The number of HIV particles in a person's blood is called the ~ ~.
Capsid
The protein coat or shell of a virus particle. One of the two essential components shared by all viruses, along with a core of nucleic acid, it surrounds the nucleic acid core as an outer protein.
Immunization
The use of a vaccine to stimulate active immunity.
Helper T cells/macrophages
Two cell types infected by HIV.
Granzymes and perforin
Two molecules secreted by cytotoxic T cells that are involved in the killing of target cells.
Spikes
Types of ~ give influenza its great variability.
Interferons
Virus-infected cells often secrete ~, which cause uninfected cells to produce substances that interfere with viral replication.
Clonal selection model
When a B cell or T cell is stimulated by an antigen, it divides, producing many identical copies of itself. This is an important part of the ~ ~ ~.
Prions
~ cause Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in humans, scrapie in sheep, and bovine spongiform encephalopathy (Mad cow disease) in cows.
Microbes
~ found in the areas of the body such as the mouth and intestines that help to prevent infection by pathogens are called normal flora.