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kinase an enzyme that catalyzes reactions involving the transfer of phosphates from a nucleoside triphosphate (eg, ATP) to another substrate phys
Ãâó: www.desicca.de/plant_breeding/Dictionary/Dictionar...
kinematics Area of study that examines the spatial and temporal components of motion (position, velocity, acceleration).
Ãâó: www.methodfitness.com/fitness_glossary_k.shtml
kine- is still used in rural English dialects.
Ãâó: encyclopedia.laborlawtalk.com/English_plural
kindling A process (demonstrated by experiments using animals) in which electrical abnormalities become more intense over time; for example, small electrical shocks are delivered to the brain once a day to cause a progressive tendency toward seizures; eventually, seizures may occur without the electrical shocks.
Ãâó: professionals.epilepsy.com/page/glossary.html
kinetics Kinetics is the science of measuring changes, of assessing rates of movements and flow. In biology, kinetics is concerned with enzyme kinetics, the rate of how proteins help catalyze a chemical reactions. Another application of kinetics is the rate of flow of molecules in solution by diffusion or in an energy field (such as charges in an electric field, or mass in a gravitational field). Flux rates of molecules across biological membranes are also studied by kinetics.
Ãâó: www.whatislife.com/glossary.htm
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