Not exact matches
Pink goo, aka pink slime, is scraps of meat and connective tissue swept up from slaughterhouse floors that are doused with a pink chemical to kill
dangerous pathogens — since they've been, you know,
on the floor — then blended together into a substance that looks like strawberry fro - yo.
Aside from well - established things like rabies virus, SARS coronavirus (the virus that causes severe acute respiratory syndrome) and Marburg virus (an extremely
dangerous but rare hemorrhagic fever
pathogen), bats appear to carry a plethora of other germs with unclear effects
on human health, if any.
A study published
on October 15th in PLOS
Pathogens explores what distinguishes this fungus from its relatives and likely makes it so
dangerous.
A laboratory in Wuhan is
on the cusp of being cleared to work with the world's most
dangerous pathogens.
University researchers who work with
dangerous pathogens should keep an eye
on each other and report any signs of suspicious behavior to lab managers, says a panel of life scientists that was asked by the U.S. government to think of ways to tackle the threat of lab insiders carrying out a bioterrorist attack.
... But just logically, the more places where work with
dangerous pathogens goes
on, the more possibility there is of accidents or accidental releases.»
A study published
on May 22nd in PLOS
Pathogens reveals how a new type of anti-microbial substance interferes with biofilms formed by several
dangerous bacteria.
The researchers don't know yet whether the viruses have a positive or negative effect
on overall health but speculate that in some cases, they may keep the immune system primed to respond to
dangerous pathogens while in others, lingering viruses increase the risk of disease.
Thus we have Rampage, in which Johnson stars as Davis Okoye, a big - hearted primatologist who enjoys a very special relationship with an albino gorilla named George (portrayed in motion - capture by Jason Liles) until a spaceship explodes and rains down
dangerous pathogens on Earth.
Vaccinations are intended to stimulate immunity to
dangerous viruses or bacteria, so that our dogs and cats are theoretically protected against these
pathogens on future exposure to them.