prosthetic$64723$ - traduction vers néerlandais
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prosthetic$64723$ - traduction vers néerlandais

NON-POLYPEPTIDE UNIT REQUIRED FOR THE BIOLOGICAL FUNCTION OF SOME PROTEINS
Prosthetic groups

prosthetic      
adj. van kunstgebit
artificial leg         
  • A man with a lower-extremity prosthesis
  • An artificial limbs factory in 1941
  • "Illustration of mechanical hand", c. 1564
  • Brain control of 3D prosthetic arm movement (hitting targets). This movie was recorded when the participant controlled the 3D movement of a prosthetic arm to hit physical targets in a research lab.
  • Artificial limbs for a juvenile [[thalidomide]] survivor 1961–1965
  • A prosthetic leg worn by [[Ellie Cole]]
  • Iron prosthetic hand believed to have been owned by Götz von Berlichingen (1480–1562)
  • Sgt. Jerrod Fields, a U.S. Army World Class Athlete Program Paralympic sprinter hopeful, works out at the U.S. Olympic Training Center in Chula Vista, Calif. A below-the-knee amputee, Fields won a gold medal in the 100 meters with a time of 12.15 seconds at the Endeavor Games in Edmond, OK, on June 13, 2009
  • Artificial iron hand believed to date from 1560 to 1600
  • Manufacturing a prosthetic finger
  • Low-cost above-knee prosthetic limbs: ICRC Knee (left) and LC Knee (right)
  • Actor [[Owen Wilson]] gripping the myoelectric prosthetic arm of a United States Marine
  • Prosthetic toe from ancient Egypt
  • Types of prosthesis used for replacing joints in the human body
  • The Capua leg (replica)
  • Star Wars themed "Hero Arm" by Open Bionics
  • Knee prosthesis manufactured using [[WorkNC]] [[Computer Aided Manufacturing]] software
ARTIFICIAL DEVICE THAT REPLACES A MISSING BODY PART
Prosthetics; Prosthetic limb; Artificial limb; Artificial Limbs; Prosthetic; Prostheses; Prosthetic devices; Surgical prosthetics; Transtibial prosthesis; Prosthesis implantation; Prosthesis design; Prosthesis fitting; Transradial prosthesis; Transradial Prostheses; Transtibial Prostheses; Prosthetic hook; Transfemoral prosthesis; Transhumeral prosthesis; Prosthetic limbs; Prosthetists; Prosthetic hand; Artificial limbs; Artificial Limb; C-Leg; Artificial leg; Myoelectric prosthesis; Prosthetic arm; Prosthetic leg; Myoelectric prothesis; Myoelectric; Luke Arm; Trautman Hook; Prosthetic legs; Powered Prothesis; Powered prosthesis; Fake foot; Fake leg; Prostethics; Prosthetic implant; Prosthetic hands; Robotic prostheses; 🦾; 🦿; History of prosthetics
kunstbeen
glass eye         
  • Cat with an ocular prosthesis.
  • 1915–1920}}.
  • Prosthetic eye and glasses made for an injured [[World War I]] soldier by pioneering plastic surgeon [[Johannes Esser]]
  • Artificial glass eye being moulded under heat, 1938
TYPE OF CRANIOFACIAL PROSTHESIS
Ocular prosthetic; Ocular prosthetics; Glass eye; Glass eyeball; Eye prosthesis; Glass eyes; Orbital prosthesis; Glass Eyes
kunstoog

Définition

prosthetic group
¦ noun Biochemistry a non-protein group forming part of or combined with a protein.

Wikipédia

Prosthetic group

A prosthetic group is the non-amino acid component that is part of the structure of the heteroproteins or conjugated proteins, being tightly linked to the apoprotein.

Not to be confused with the cosubstrate that binds to the enzyme apoenzyme (either a holoprotein or heteroprotein) by non-covalent binding a non-protein (non-amino acid)

This is a component of a conjugated protein that is required for the protein's biological activity. The prosthetic group may be organic (such as a vitamin, sugar, RNA, phosphate or lipid) or inorganic (such as a metal ion). Prosthetic groups are bound tightly to proteins and may even be attached through a covalent bond. They often play an important role in enzyme catalysis. A protein without its prosthetic group is called an apoprotein, while a protein combined with its prosthetic group is called a holoprotein. A non-covalently bound prosthetic group cannot generally be removed from the holoprotein without denaturating the protein. Thus, the term "prosthetic group" is a very general one and its main emphasis is on the tight character of its binding to the apoprotein. It defines a structural property, in contrast to the term "coenzyme" that defines a functional property.

Prosthetic groups are a subset of cofactors. Loosely bound metal ions and coenzymes are still cofactors, but are generally not called prosthetic groups. In enzymes, prosthetic groups are involved in the catalytic mechanism and required for activity. Other prosthetic groups have structural properties. This is the case for the sugar and lipid moieties in glycoproteins and lipoproteins or RNA in ribosomes. They can be very large, representing the major part of the protein in proteoglycans for instance.

The heme group in hemoglobin is a prosthetic group. Further examples of organic prosthetic groups are vitamin derivatives: thiamine pyrophosphate, pyridoxal-phosphate and biotin. Since prosthetic groups are often vitamins or made from vitamins, this is one of the reasons why vitamins are required in the human diet. Inorganic prosthetic groups are usually transition metal ions such as iron (in heme groups, for example in cytochrome c oxidase and hemoglobin), zinc (for example in carbonic anhydrase), copper (for example in complex IV of the respiratory chain) and molybdenum (for example in nitrate reductase).