| DOM | deaminated O-methyl metabolite; department of medicine; dimethoxymethylamphetamine; dissolved organi... |
|---|---|
| TOM | toxic oxygen metabolite |
| BIVAS | body image visual analogue scale |
| DA | dark adaptation; dark agouti [rat]; daunomycin; degenerative arthritis; delayed action; Dental Assis... |
| LASA | linear-analogue self assessment |
| M1 | Metabolite 1 |
|---|---|
| PGFM | Prostaglandin F(2alpha) metabolite |
| ROM | Reactive oxygen metabolite |
| M-3 | metabolite |
| GnRH-A | GnRH analogue |
| analogue | <chemistry> A compound that is structurally similar to another. (10 Jan 1998) |
|---|---|
| base analogue | <biochemistry> A chemical which resembles a nucleotide base. They can substitute the Purine and pyrimidine bases that normally appear in DNA, despite minor differences in structure. May be used for inducing mutations, including point mutations. For example: 5 bromouracil can replace thymine or 2 aminopurine replace adenine. (13 Nov 1997) |
| metabolite | <biochemistry> Any substance produced by metabolism or by a metabolic process. (18 Nov 1997) |
| primary metabolite | A metabolite excreted during the growth phase. (09 Oct 1997) |
| secondary metabolite | <biochemistry> Chemicals that are usually unique to one organism or class of organisms, and are not essential to cell survival. They perform specialised functions, for example, degrading food sources or fighting off other organisms. Many of the chemicals that plants or microorganisms produce that are of biochemical interest are secondary metabolites, including antibiotics. (14 Nov 1997) |
| nucleoside analogue | A synthetic molecule that resembles a naturally occuring nucleoside, but that lacks a bond site needed to link it to an adjacent nucleotide. (09 Oct 1997) |
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