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career mobility The upward or downward mobility in an occupation or the change from one occupation to another.
(12 Dec 1998)
residential mobility Frequent change of residence, either in the same city or town, or between cities, states or communities.
(12 Dec 1998)
mobility Capability of movement, of being moved or of flowing freely.
Origin: L. Mobilitas
(18 Nov 1997)
high-mobility group protein <protein> An HMG protein is one of a group of various different proteins which are somehow involved with chromatin, but which are not histones and whose exact function is not known.
(09 Oct 1997)
high mobility group proteins Family of small, nonhistone, nuclear proteins. Some appear to be involved in controlling transcription.
(18 Nov 1997)
social mobility The movement or shifting of membership between or within social classes by individuals or by groups.
(12 Dec 1998)
tooth mobility Horizontal and, to a lesser degree, axial movement of a tooth in response to normal forces, as in occlusion. It refers also to the movability of a tooth resulting from loss of all or a portion of its attachment and supportive apparatus, as seen in periodontitis, occlusal trauma, and periodontosis.
(12 Dec 1998)
antigenic shift Mutation, i.e., sudden change in molecular structure of RNA/DNA in microorganisms, especially viruses, which produces new strains of the microorganism; hosts previously exposed to other strains have little or no acquired immunity to the new strain; antigenic shift is believed to be the explanation for the occurrence of strains of microorganisms, such as the influenza virus, associated with large scale epidemics.
(05 Mar 2000)
antigen shift Abrupt change in antigens expressed by a species or variety of organisms. Usually seen in microorganisms where the change may allow escape from immune recognition. Antigenic drift is a more gradual change.
See: antigenic variation.
(18 Nov 1997)
axis shift Deflection of the electrical axis of the heart to the right or left of the normal.
See: left axis deviation, right axis deviation, axis.
Synonym: axis shift.
(05 Mar 2000)
gas shift process A process in which carbon monoxide and hydrogen react in the presence of a catalyst to form methane and water.
(05 Dec 1998)
chemical shift Dependence of the resonance frequency of a nucleus on the chemical binding of the atom or molecule in which it is contained.
See: chemical shift artifact.
(05 Mar 2000)
chemical shift artifact In magnetic resonance imaging, a dark band caused by a biochemical difference in resonant frequency of adjacent regions rather than a true anatomic separation.
(05 Mar 2000)
chloride shift When CO2 enters the blood from the tissues, it passes into the red blood cell and is converted by carbonate dehydratase to bicarbonate (HCO3-); HCO3- ion passes out into the plasma while Cl- migrates into the red blood cell. Reverse changes occur in the lungs when CO2 is eliminated from the blood.
Synonym: Hamburger's phenomenon.
(05 Mar 2000)
phase shift <microscopy> A change in the phase relationship between two alternating quantities of the same frequency.
(05 Aug 1998)
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