transduction
(noun)
horizontal gene transfer mechanism in prokaryotes where genes are transferred using a virus
Examples of transduction in the following topics:
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Prokaryotic Reproduction
- Prokaryotes reproduce asexually by binary fission; they can also exchange genetic material by transformation, transduction, and conjugation.
- In transduction, bacteriophages, the viruses that infect bacteria, sometimes also move short pieces of chromosomal DNA from one bacterium to another.
- Transduction results in a recombinant organism.
- In (b) transduction, a bacteriophage injects DNA into the cell that contains a small fragment of DNA from a different prokaryote.
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Transduction of Sound
- The cochlea is a whorled structure, like the shell of a snail, and it contains receptors for transduction of the mechanical wave into an electrical signal.
- The site of transduction is in the organ of Corti (spiral organ).
- The organ of Corti (bottom image) is the site of sound transduction.
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Transduction of Light
- The rods and cones are the site of transduction of light into a neural signal.
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Transduction and Perception
- Transduction is the process that converts a sensory signal to an electrical signal to be processed in a specialized area in the brain.
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Reception
- This process is called sensory transduction.
- There are two broad types of cellular systems that perform sensory transduction.
- In the second type of sensory transduction, a sensory nerve ending responds to a stimulus in the internal or external environment; this neuron constitutes the sensory receptor.
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Reception and Transduction
- Transduction of the five tastes happens through different mechanisms that reflect the molecular composition of the tastant.
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Termination of the Signal Cascade
- Ligand binding to the receptor allows for signal transduction through the cell.
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Excitation–Contraction Coupling
- It is the link (transduction) between the action potential generated in the sarcolemma and the start of a muscle contraction .
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How Hormones Work
- The hormone binds to the receptor protein, resulting in the activation of a signal transduction mechanism that ultimately leads to cell type-specific responses.
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Anatomy of the Eye
- The retina, a thin layer of cells located on the inner surface of the back of the eye, consists of photoreceptive cells, which are responsible for the transduction of light into nervous impulses.