| cytokine |
A chemical messenger. See also growth factors.
Ãâó: www.convatec.com/en_AU/tips/dictionary/wound_care....
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| cytokine |
A hormone-like molecule, produced by one cell, that has an effect on another cell. Some types of cytokines are normally produced in low concentration by the immune system as part of the body
Ãâó: www.science.org.au/nova/014/014glo.htm
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| cytokine |
These are hormones produced by white blood cells (lymphocytes) that communicate with other cells of the immune system, recruiting them to perform more aggressive roles in the fighting off of infection or in the rejection of something from the body such as a baby, a kidney or a bone marrow transplant.
Ãâó: repro-med.net/glossary.php
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| cytokinesis |
Division of the cytoplasm of a plant or animal into two, as distinct from the division of its nucleus (which is mitosis).
Ãâó: www.cytokinetics.com/cyto/glossary
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| cytokine |
Protein secreted by a cell that signals other cells in a paracrine fashion or even itself (autocrine). The various lymphokines, chemokines, interferons, colony-stimulating factors, and tumor necrosis factors are examples. [cytokine receptors] Cytokines, unlike hormones, go to nearby cells, or even the cell that produced the signaling molecule, and work there. They usually do not pass into the blood. Hormones are created in special organs and pass into the blood to act at distant sites. More.
Ãâó: home.comcast.net/~bkrentzman/glossary2.html
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