Adhesins - Surface-associated proteins and fimbriae
Host receptors or structure - Glycoproteins

what are two adhesins that C. diff have and what host structure do they bind to...
Which part of the AB toxin is required to bind to host cell surface? The A domain. The B domain. Both the A and B domains. AB toxin does not bind to host cell. Which life cycle of Chlamydophila pneumonia is infectious? The inclusion bodies. The elementary bodies. The reticulate bodies. Both a and b. Which cells are part of the granuloma: Dead macrophages. Active macrophages. CD4 T cells. All of the above. Which E. coli strain is associated with...
what is the significant health data for a C-diff patient
QUESTION 21 These proteins, often injected into host cells by a type 3 secretion system, allow certain bacteria to penetrate cells by inducing phagocytosis of the bacteria by the host cell. As a result, these bacteria don't have to compete for nutrients and can resist many body defense molecules. This is used as a virulence factor by Shigella, Yersinia, and Salmonella. This best describes what? Bacterial flagella and axial filaments. Bacterial cell surface proteins called adhesins. Bacterial capsules (glycocalyces). Bacterial...
. Consider a TCP connection between Host A and Host B. Suppose that the TCP segments traveling from Host A to Host B have source port number 37 and destination port number 61. What are the source and destination port numbers for the segments traveling from Host B to Host A? . Suppose a process in Host C has a UDP socket with port number 6789. Sup- pose both Host A and Host B each send a UDP segment to...
Can I get help with this question: 1. What are the 3 diff ways to measure tax rates? a) what is the marginal tax rate? b) average tax rate? c) effective tax rate? 2. What are the three tax rate structures ? a) what is a proportional tax (flat tax) rate structure? b) What is a progressive tax rate structure? c)What is a regressive tax rate struicture? d) What are some examples of each tax rate structure? 3)What are two...
What type of protein-ligand mechanism do antigens bind antibodies? A. Lock-and-key model B. Induced fit C. Molecular dynamics D. All of the above
The structure below is
Technetium-99mTriamide-Mercaptide. what is the shape of the
compound, and how do the oxo-ligands bind in the body for renal
nuclear imaging?
снасоон Тc-MAGз
consider a network using packet switching, that consist of 4 routers and two host: Host A and Host B with distance between the two hosts is 10000 Km. assume every router has processing time = 2 s, and queueing time = 2 s. The speed of light = 2x108 m/s and all the links have a bandwidth of 5Mbps. Calculate the queuing delay for the whole network.
QUESTION 23 As a result of this structure, large amounts of LPS bind to macrophages causing them to release excessive amounts of inflammatory cytokines. The LPS and cytokines bind to neutrophils causing extracellular killing and tissue destruction and, when systemic, can lead to SIRS. This is used as a virulence factor by Neisseria meningitidis, E.coli, Salmonella, Shigella, and Enterobacter. This best describes what? A Gram-positive cell wall A Gram-negative cell wall. An acid-fast cell wall. A bacterial cytoplasmic membrane.
What types of proteins bind to HTH motifs? Please provide an example or two.