F pilus - significado y definición. Qué es F pilus
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Qué (quién) es F pilus - definición

A PROTEINACEOUS HAIR-LIKE APPENDAGE ON THE SURFACE OF BACTERIA RANGING FROM 2-8 NM IN DIAMETER.
Fimbrium; Conjugation pilus; Sex pilus; Sex pili; Pili, sex; Conjugation tube; Fimbria (bacteriology); F pilus; F Pili; Bacterial fimbriae; Type IV pilus; Type 4 pilus; Type four pilus; Type IV pili; Type I Pili
  • Proposed conjugation mechanisms between donor and recipient cells in archaea (left) and bacteria (right). The schematic shows how ssDNA substrates are generated by the HerA-NurA machinery in the donor archaeal cells and by the plasmid-encoded relaxosome in bacteria. The figure is reproduced from <ref name=":2" />
  • access-date=2016-12-03}}</ref>
  • Type IVa pilus machine architectural model

F         
  • Latin F
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SIXTH LETTER OF THE LATIN ALPHABET
F (letter); F; ASCII 70; ASCII 102; U+0046; U+0066; Ꞙ; Letter F; Ef (Latin letter)
F1
(also f)
¦ noun (plural Fs or F's)
1. the sixth letter of the alphabet.
2. denoting the next after E in a set of items, categories, etc.
3. Music the fourth note of the diatonic scale of C major.
--------
F2
¦ abbreviation
1. Fahrenheit.
2. farad(s).
3. Chemistry faraday(s).
4. (in racing results) favourite.
5. female.
6. fighter (in designations of US aircraft types).
7. Biology filial generation.
8. Brit. fine (used in describing grades of pencil lead).
9. (in motor racing) formula.
10. Franc(s).
11. France (international vehicle registration).
12. (in tables of sports results) goals or points for.
¦ symbol
1. the chemical element fluorine.
2. Physics force.
F         
  • Latin F
  • 55px
  • 30px
  • 20px
  • Waw
  • 40px
  • Waw
  • 20px
SIXTH LETTER OF THE LATIN ALPHABET
F (letter); F; ASCII 70; ASCII 102; U+0046; U+0066; Ꞙ; Letter F; Ef (Latin letter)
f         
  • Latin F
  • 55px
  • 30px
  • 20px
  • Waw
  • 40px
  • Waw
  • 20px
SIXTH LETTER OF THE LATIN ALPHABET
F (letter); F; ASCII 70; ASCII 102; U+0046; U+0066; Ꞙ; Letter F; Ef (Latin letter)
¦ abbreviation
1. Grammar feminine.
2. femto- (10-15).
3. (in textual references) folio.
4. Music forte.
5. (in racing results) furlong(s).
6. Chemistry denoting electrons and orbitals possessing three units of angular momentum. [f from fundamental, orig. applied to lines in atomic spectra.]
¦ symbol
1. focal length.
2. Mathematics a function of a specified variable.
3. Electronics frequency.

Wikipedia

Pilus

A pilus (Latin for 'hair'; plural: pili) is a hair-like appendage found on the surface of many bacteria and archaea. The terms pilus and fimbria (Latin for 'fringe'; plural: fimbriae) can be used interchangeably, although some researchers reserve the term pilus for the appendage required for bacterial conjugation. All conjugative pili are primarily composed of pilin – fibrous proteins, which are oligomeric.

Dozens of these structures can exist on the bacterial and archaeal surface. Some bacteria, viruses or bacteriophages attach to receptors on pili at the start of their reproductive cycle.

Pili are antigenic. They are also fragile and constantly replaced, sometimes with pili of different composition, resulting in altered antigenicity. Specific host responses to old pili structures are not effective on the new structure. Recombination betwene genes of some (but not all) pili code for variable (V) and constant (C) regions of the pili (similar to immunoglobulin diversity). As the primary antigenic determinants, virulence factors and impunity factors on the cell surface of a number of species of Gram negative and some Gram positive bacteria, including Enterobacteriaceae, Pseudomonadaceae, and Neisseriaceae, there has been much interest in the study of pili as organelle of adhesion and as vaccine components. The first detailed study of pili was done by Brinton and co-workers who demonstrated the existence of two distinct phases within one bacterial strain: pileated (p+) and non-pileated)