Pseudomonas also will
kill human lung cells in tissue culture dishes.
We've also found that in a petri dish, the anti-quorum-sensing molecule prevents Pseudomonas from
killing human lung cells and from making a biofilm that would enable it to mount an attack.
Not exact matches
After «inhaling» E. coli, for instance, the
lung attracted
human white blood
cells to attack and
kill the bacteria, a process scientists have long understood but never before witnessed in vitro.
This compound
killed human breast, prostate,
lung, and liver cancer
cells, while sparing normal
cells.
The result was a highly selective drug they named SBI - 0206965, which successfully
killed a number of cancer
cell types, including
human and mouse
lung cancer
cells and
human brain cancer
cells, some of which were previously shown to be particularly reliant on cellular recycling.