(1) The infectious viruses under study caused no activation of Rous virus genome in the virogenic SHET K-3 cell line.
(2) Chickens inoculated with the same dose of pp-shET also showed exfoliation within 30 min of injection.
(3) On histopathological examination of the skin at 12 h after injection of pp-shET, an intraepidermal cleavage plane was shown between the stratum corneum and stratum granulosum and at the stratum granulosum.
(4) However, heat-treated pp-shET did not cause exfoliation in piglets for up to 24 h after injection.
(5) Partially purified shET (pp-shET) caused exfoliation in piglets at 8 to 12 h after intradermal or subcutaneous injection.
(6) We report our initial experience with silicone gel (silastic gel shetting) in the treatment of 15 children with hypertrophic scars, without success to other alternatives therapies.
(7) Interference between Rous virus and vaccinia virus in SHET Sh-R culture was not due to interferon.
(8) The partial purification of exfoliative toxin produced by S. hyicus (shET) was performed by precipitation with 50-80% saturated ammonium sulfate, gel filtration on a Sephadex G-75 column and column chromatography on DEAE-cellulose.
(9) It was suggested that the rounding effect was not caused by the increase in cyclic AMP in cells inoculated with pp-shET but by the cleavage of intracellular contacts.
(10) The degree of Newcastle disease virus reproduction in all 3 cultures was the same whereas vaccinia virus synthesis in SHET Sh-R was inhibited as compared with NHET and SHET K-3 cultures.
(11) The capacity of normal (NHET) and Rous virus-transformed cell line of armenian hamster both producing (SHET Sh-R) and not producing (SHET K-3) virus to support reproduction of vaccinia and Newcastle disease viruses was demonstrated.
(12) In piglets inoculated with partially purified exfoliative toxin (pp-shET) produced by Staphylococcus hyicus subsp.
(13) However, exfoliation was not demonstrated in mouse, rat, guinea pig, hamster, dog or cat inoculated with pp-shET until 24 h after injection.
Shew
Definition:
(v. t. & i.) See Show.
(n.) Show.
Example Sentences:
(1) Nevertheless optic and electronic microscopy observations shew some nerve, neuronal and a few muscular alterations occuring during rapid decompression.
(2) Analysis with 125I-labeled TNF to determine the number of receptors binding TNF in the various cell phases shewed a phase specificity with the maximum number occurring in the G2-M phase, similar to the peak in cytotoxicity.
(3) A single spirochete strain isolated fromt the shew constituted the fourth group.
(4) Shew, C.-M. Huang, W.-H. Lee, E. Marsilio, E. Paucha, and D.M.
(5) The method used for preparing large unilamellar vesicles was adapted from the procedure of Shew and Deamer (Shew, R. L., and Deamer, D. W. (1985) Biochim.
(6) This was pronounced as Shiu or Shew and later became Shiva, who was Phallus-god.
(7) Hemorrhagic manifestations were insidious, but all cases shewed petechiae, ecchymoses and epistaxes.
(8) All cultures shew myxamoeba-like organisms aggregating and merging into pseudoplasmodial forms that produced microcysts.
(9) Shew, R. Bookstein, P. Scully, and W.-H. Lee, Science 241:218-221, 1988).
(10) The grains were found over the nucleus and cytoplasm of the cell and shewed no preferential association with any particular cytoplasmic inclusion bodies, organelles, or vesicles Other cell types were unlabeled except for a few mast cells, certain vascular smooth muscle cells, and one nerve ending.