Sentences with phrase «damage to cell walls»

I'm pretty sure too much of it can cause damage to cell walls, and possiblly cancer all the way from esophagus down to intestines.
Thus, the rate of freezing for plant tissues is extremely important due to the effect of freezing rate on the size of ice crystals, cell hydration, and damage to cell walls (Rahman, 1999).
Large ice crystals are known to cause mechanical damage to cell walls in addition to cell dehydration.

Not exact matches

Inflammation in response to the Salmonella stressed the pathogens themselves, and the resulting damage promoted bacteriophage replication, followed by rupture of the bacterial cell wall and release of the bacteriophages.
Wall says, to the research group's knowledge, this is the first evidence that a bacterium can use cell - content sharing to repair damaged siblings.
According to cardiologist Stefanie Dimmler at the University of Frankfurt in Germany, degraded telomeres might cause heart disease by impeding the ability of cells from the bone marrow to repair damaged parts of the arterial walls.
When these fatty deposits damage an artery wall, immune cells flock to the scene — notably macrophages, which gobble up dying and damaged cells all over the body.
Melittin does its damage by penetrating the outer walls of cells and opening pores that allow the contents of the cell to escape.
To repair heart muscle in a mouse, researchers inject adult stem cells into the muscle of the damaged wall of a mouse heart.
These can cause damage to the lining of gut or the tight links between the cell wall, letting proteins and bits of bacteria into the bloodstream, setting off an inflammatory response throughout the body.
In laboratory studies apple polyphenol extracts were found to prevent damage to human gastric epithelial (intestinal wall) cells.
This HGH affect also enhances the body's ability to heal the damaged pancreas and insulin receptors on the cell wall.
Glutamine provides fuel for the cells in the intestinal walls to regrow and repair damaged areas of your gut.
A damaged endothelial cell wall means low performance during physical activity as well as an increased risk in heart attack since a healthy endothelial cell wall does not allow arterial blockages to form.
When the immune system has been compromised, or when the normal lining of the gut becomes damaged, the yeast, instead of remaining within the intestinal tract where they belong, can metamorphose into its fungal form sending out rhizomes (roots) to penetrate the walls of the gut, opening it to the absorption of yeast cells, particles of cells, and the toxins these micro organisms produce enter the interior of the body and pass into the bloodstream.
Researchers at the University of Palermo in Italy found that the betalains contained in prickly pears appears to protect the endothelial cell walls of blood vessels from oxidative damage by free radicals.
In addition to the niacin it supplies, brown rice may also help raise blood levels of nitric oxide, a small molecule known to improve blood vessel dilation and to inhibit oxidative (free radical) damage of cholesterol and the adhesion of white cells to the vascular wall (two important steps in the development of atherosclerotic plaques).
Oxidative damage, another name for the chemical reaction that free radicals cause, can lead to a breakdown or even hardening of lipids, which makeup all cell walls.
In addition to the cell walls, other biological molecules are also susceptible to damage, including RNA, DNA and protein enzymes.
These bacterial agents enter into the urinary tract and reaches up to the cat bladder, where they get embedded in epithelium (outer layer) of the bladder walls which causes damage to cells, thus causing inflammation and infection.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z