Is there anything I can do to prevent passing the NDI gene on to my children?
| Topic: | NDI: An Overview |
|---|---|
| Author: | Knoers, Nine |
| Topic: | NDI: An Overview |
|---|---|
| Author: | Knoers, Nine |
Nephrogenic diabetes insipidus.
1. An individual who harbors the specific organisms of a disease without manifest symptoms and is capable of transmitting the infection; the condition of such an individual is referred to as the carrier state.
2. Electron carrier; a chemical substance that can accept one or more electrons and then donate them to another substance (being reduced and then reoxidized).
3. An instrument or apparatus for carrying something.
4. In genetics, an individual who is heterozygous for a recessive gene and thus does not express the recessive phenotype but can transmit it to offspring. Only females can be carriers of X-linked recessive traits.
5. A substance that carries a radioisotopic or other label, as in a tracer study. A second isotope mixed with a particular isotope is also referred to as a carrier.
6. A transport protein that carries specific substances, e.g., in the blood or across cell membranes.
7. In immunology, a macromolecular substance to which a hapten is coupled in order to produce an immune response against the hapten, immune responses being usually produced only against large molecules capable of simultaneously binding both B cells and helper T cells.
Nephrogenic diabetes insipidus.
1. An individual who harbors the specific organisms of a disease without manifest symptoms and is capable of transmitting the infection; the condition of such an individual is referred to as the carrier state.
2. Electron carrier; a chemical substance that can accept one or more electrons and then donate them to another substance (being reduced and then reoxidized).
3. An instrument or apparatus for carrying something.
4. In genetics, an individual who is heterozygous for a recessive gene and thus does not express the recessive phenotype but can transmit it to offspring. Only females can be carriers of X-linked recessive traits.
5. A substance that carries a radioisotopic or other label, as in a tracer study. A second isotope mixed with a particular isotope is also referred to as a carrier.
6. A transport protein that carries specific substances, e.g., in the blood or across cell membranes.
7. In immunology, a macromolecular substance to which a hapten is coupled in order to produce an immune response against the hapten, immune responses being usually produced only against large molecules capable of simultaneously binding both B cells and helper T cells.
Nephrogenic diabetes insipidus.
