We are using cookies This website uses cookies in order to offer you the most relevant information. By browsing this website, you accept these cookies.
Did you know? You can double click on a word to look it up on TermGallery.
Meanings of bacterial adhesion in English
We have no meanings for "bacterial adhesion" in our records yet.
Usage of bacterial adhesion in English
1
We hypothesize that secreted diglucosyl-diacylglycerol blocks host binding sites, thereby preventing bacterialadhesion.
2
The bacterialadhesion characteristics onto glass bead substratum were also evaluated by packed bed method.
3
Instead, invasion increased due to increased bacterialadhesion to epithelial monolayers with compromised cell-cell junctions.
4
Binding-induced mechanical stabilization plays key roles in proteins involved in muscle contraction, cellular mechanotransduction, or bacterialadhesion.
5
Here, we demonstrate a novel relationship between NMF expression in AD skin and strength of bacterialadhesion.
6
Therefore, inhibition of bacterialadhesion and biofilm formation on the surface of medical devices can reduce the risk of SSIs.
7
This structural shift has not been noted in structural studies of other bacterialadhesion sub-structures assembled via donor strand complementation.
8
Int280 comprises three domains; two immunoglobulin-like domains and a C-type lectin-like module, which define a new family of bacterialadhesion molecules.
9
Strong binding forces originate from a specific interaction between the bacterialadhesion clumping factor B (ClfB) and skin ligands.
10
The CB coating is able to efficiently resist bacterialadhesion and contamination during fog harvesting, protecting the device from microbiological corrosion.
11
Therefore, in order to assess the influence of zwitterionic nature in in vitro bacterialadhesion, studies were carried out with Staphylococcus aureus.
12
In both species, they mediate bacterialadhesion to mannose receptors on host cells and share essentially the same morphology and assembly mechanisms.
13
Initial bacterialadhesion to medical devices and subsequent biofilm formation are known as the leading causes of surgical site infection (SSI).
14
There is growing evidence that the production of extracellular polymeric substances at the cell-substrate interface plays a key role in strengthening bacterialadhesion.
15
In contrast, FimH-R66 completely lost shear-enhanced binding properties, with bacterialadhesion being inhibited by shear forces and lacking a rolling mode of binding.
16
We also investigated the role of FnBPA expressed on the surface of S. aureus in promoting biofilm formation and bacterialadhesion to fibrinogen.