| ¿µ¹® | ABO erythroblastosis | ÇÑ±Û | ÀÌ¿¡ºñ¿À Àû¸ð±¸Áõ |
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||
| ABO | Three Main Blood Types |
|---|---|
| ABO | abortion; absent bed occupancy; American Board of Orthodontists; blood group system consisting of gr... |
| OAB | ABO blood group; old age benefits |
| HL | hairline; hairy leukoplakia; half life; hearing level; hearing loss; heparin lock; histiocytic lymph... |
| HLA | histocompatibility leukocyte antigen; histocompatibility locus antigen; homologous leukocyte antibod... |
| QTL | Aquantitative trait locus |
|---|---|
| HLC | Health Locus of Control |
| HLOC | Health Locus of Control |
| HLA | Histocompatibility Locus Antigen |
| LC | Locus Coeruleus |
| ABO antigens | <haematology, immunology> A system of genetically determined antigens (proteins) located on the surface of the erythrocyte. The presence of these specific antigens gives a blood its unique properties. Because of the antigen differences existing between individuals, blood groups are significant in blood transfusions, maternal-foetal incompatibilities (erythroblastosis foetalis), tissue and organ transplantation. (27 Sep 1997) |
|---|---|
| ABO blood group | <haematology> The major human blood type system which describes the oligosaccharide glycoprotein antigens found on the surface of human blood cells. According to the type of antigen present, a person may be assigned a blood type of A, B, AB or O. A second type of antigen, the Rh factor, renders a positive or negative blood type. The ABO blood group system is important because it determines who can donate blood to or accept blood from whom. Type A or AB blood will cause an immune reaction in people with type B blood and type B and AB blood will cause a reaction in people with type A blood. Conversely, type O blood has no A or B antigens, so people with type O blood are universal donors. And since AB blood already produces both antigens, people who are type AB can accept any of the other blood types without suffering an immune reaction. (04 Jul 1999) |
| ABO haemolytic disease of the newborn | Erythroblastosis foetalis due to maternal-foetal incompatibility with respect to an antigen of the ABO blood group; the foetus possesses A or B antigen which is lacking in the mother, and the mother produces immune antibody which causes haemolysis of foetal erythrocytes. (05 Mar 2000) |
| ABO incompatibility | <haematology> A type of blood incompatibility, found rarely. Transfusion reactions may occur as a result of such incompatibility. (27 Sep 1997) |
| genetic locus | <genetics> The position of a gene in a linkage map or on a chromosome. (18 Nov 1997) |
| marker locus | A locus on a chromosome or in a stretch of DNA that can be identified (e.g., a restriction fragment length polymorphism) and can serve in linkage analysis and in the isolation of a disease gene. See: linkage marker. (05 Mar 2000) |
| cis-acting locus | A section of DNA that affects the activity of DNA sequences on that same molecule of DNA. (05 Mar 2000) |
| complex locus | A set of closely linked genetic loci with a common function, as in the major histocompatibility complex locus. (05 Mar 2000) |
| W locus | <molecular biology> Mouse coat colour locus, equivalent to the kit proto-oncogene, that encodes a receptor tyrosine kinase essential for development of haemopoietic and germ cells. (18 Nov 1997) |
| multi locus enzyme electrophoresis | Inhibition of translation of the transcript of a transposase gene by a multicopy plasmid with suitable inhibitory gene. The plasmid inhibits transposition events in the host bacterium. (18 Nov 1997) |
| multi-locus probe | A probe that hybridizes to anumber of different sites in the genome of an organism. (09 Oct 1997) |
| X-linked locus | Any locus that in normal karyotypes is borne on the X chromosome. (05 Mar 2000) |
| sex-linked locus | Any locus that in normal karyotypes is borne on a heterosome; commonly but incorrectly applied to an X-linked locus. (05 Mar 2000) |
| Y-linked locus | Any (haploid) locus that in normal karyotypes is borne on the Y chromosome. The known content is so far small. (05 Mar 2000) |
| locus | <genetics> The site in a linkage map or on a chromosome where the gene for a particular trait is located. Any one of the alleles of a gene may be present at this site. (18 Nov 1997) |
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