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signal transduction communication inside the cell, and also, how a cell reacts to an external signal by transmitting it across the cell membrane to the interior of the cell. Proteins on the cell surface function as receptors for specific molecules (such as the hormone, insulin). The binding of the molecule to the receptor initiates an interlinked series of biochemical events inside the cell, involving enzymes, proteins and ions (especially calcium). ...
Ãâó: www.qimr.edu.au/qimr_glossary.html
signature Printed sheet folded at least once, possibly many times, to become part of a book, magazine or other publication.
Ãâó: www.c-latitude.com/glossary.asp
significant (statistics) A term applied to differences, correlation, etc., to indicate that they are probably not due to chance alone; usually indicates a probability of not less than 95 percent.
Ãâó: www.soils.org/sssagloss/cgi-bin/gloss_search.cgi
signal sequence An amino acid sequence, normally at the N-terminus of hte protein, that directs a protein to a specific location in the cell eg chloroplast, endoplasmic reticulum.
Ãâó: www.jcu.edu.au/fmhms/school/pms/CGC/DictCellBiol.h...
signal-to-noise ratio "Signal" refers to that portion of communications that carries meaning. "Noise" refers to everything else in the communications channel. Thus signal-to-noise ratio, also called s/n ratio or SNR, is a measure of the available content compared to useless energy. In addition to its technical meaning, often used on the Internet to refer to the ratio of on-topic content to off-topic traffic in a UseNet newsgroup or mailing list discussion group.
Ãâó: docs.rinet.ru/WebLomaster/appa.htm
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