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Integrases
|
D019426 |
[Recombinases that insert exogenous DNA into the host genome. Examples include proteins encoded by the POL GENE of RETROVIRIDAE and also by temperate BACTERIOPHAGES, the best known being BACTERIOPHAGE LAMBDA.
] |
|
Acyclovir
|
D03.633.100.759.758.399.454.250 |
|
|
HIV Integrase
|
D019427 |
[Enzyme of the HUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS that is required to integrate viral DNA into cellular DNA in the nucleus of a host cell. HIV integrase is a DNA nucleotidyltransferase encoded by the pol gene.
] |
|
HIV Integrase Inhibitors
|
D019428 |
[Inhibitors of HIV INTEGRASE, an enzyme required for integration of viral DNA into cellular DNA.
] |
|
Thebaine
|
D04.615.723.795.576.856 |
|
|
Integrase Inhibitors
|
D019429 |
[Compounds which inhibit or antagonize biosynthesis or actions of integrase.
] |
|
Periarthritis
|
C05.550.251.595 |
|
|
Bursitis
|
C05.550.251 |
|
|
Dietary Sucrose
|
D019422 |
[Sucrose present in the diet. It is added to food and drinks as a sweetener.
] |
|
Peptidoglycan
|
D09.698.718.594 |
|
|
Shamanism
|
D019423 |
[An intermediate stage between polytheism and monotheism, which assumes a "Great Spirit", with lesser deities subordinated. With the beginnings of shamanism there was the advent of the medicine man or witch doctor, who assumed a supervisory relation to disease and its cure. Formally, shamanism is a religion of Ural-Altaic peoples of Northern Asia and Europe, characterized by the belief that the unseen world of gods, demons, ancestral spirits is responsive only to shamans. The Indians of North and South America entertain religious practices similar to the Ural-Altaic shamanism. The word shaman comes from the Tungusic (Manchuria and Siberia) saman, meaning Buddhist monk. The shaman handles disease almost entirely by psychotherapeutic means; he frightens away the demons of disease by assuming a terrifying mien. (From Garrison, An Introduction to the History of Medicine, 4th ed, p22; from Webster, 3d ed)
] |
|
Diet Fads
|
I03.287 |
|
|
Human Activities
|
I03 |
|
|
Dominica
|
D019424 |
[An island republic of the West Indies. Its capital is Roseau. It was discovered in 1493 by Columbus and held at different times by the French and the British in the 18th century. A member of the West Indies Federation, it achieved internal self-government in 1967 but became independent in 1978. It was named by Columbus who discovered it on Sunday, Domingo in Spanish, from the Latin Dominica dies, the Lord's Day. (From Webster's New Geographical Dictionary, 1988, p338 & Room, Brewer's Dictionary of Names, 1992, p151)
] |
|
Grenada
|
D019425 |
[An island of the West Indies. Its capital is St. George's. It was discovered in 1498 by Columbus who called it Concepcion. It was held at different times by the French and the British during the 18th century. The British suppressed a native uprising in 1795. It was an associate state of Great Britain 1967-74 but became an independent nation within the British Commonwealth in 1974. The original name referred to the Feast of the Immaculate Conception but it was later renamed for the Spanish kingdom of Granada. (From Webster's New Geographical Dictionary, 1988, p467 & Room, Brewer's Dictionary of Names, 1992, p219)
] |
|
Anti-Obesity Agents
|
D019440 |
[Agents that increase energy expenditure and weight loss by neural and metabolic regulation.
] |
|
Mitochondrial Encephalomyopathies
|
C05.651.460.620 |
|
|
Mitochondrial Myopathies
|
C05.651.460 |
|
|
Plant Epidermis
|
D019441 |
[A thin layer of cells forming the outer integument of seed plants and ferns. (Random House Unabridged Dictionary, 2d ed)
] |
|
Health Policy
|
N03.623.500.608.428 |
|