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Budding

Biology BudBuffer

Budding Yeast: Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the budding yeast, is the common yeast used in baking ("baker's yeast") and brewing ("brewer's yeast").

 


Budding
(Science: microbiology) a type of cell division in fungi and in protozoa in which one of the daughter cells develops as a smaller protrusion from the other.

Budding viruses are often exactly like the original particle that initially infected the host. In the case of HIV, however, the resulting viruses exhibit a range of variations which makes treatment difficult.
Return to Overview of HIV Infection.

budding 1. Asexual production of new organisms; usually found in yeast; 2. the process by which HIV and similar viruses leave the cell (other than by lysing).

budding
A method of asexual reproduction common in some lower animal groups in which part of the body wall bulges outward and eventually forms a new individual, which becomes detached from the parent.

budding
An asexual means of propagation in which outgrowths from the parent form and pinch off to live independently or else remain attached to eventually form extensive colonies.
buffer ...

[edit] Budding yeast
In budding yeast cells, vacuoles act as storage compartments of amino acids and detoxification compartments. Under conditions of starvation, proteins are degraded in vacuoles; this is called autophagy.

Budding
The production of buds; asexual reproduction by development of buds, which may or may not be set free, in plants and many primitive animals, resulting in clones.

budding A form of asexual reproduction in which new individuals develop from a portion of the parent, as in all bryozoans and in many protozoans, cnidarians, and polychaetes.
bud scales Modified leaves surrounding and protecting a bud.

In budding yeast cells, vacuoles are the storage compartments of amino acids and the detoxification compartment, which are described in previous topics. Recently, vacuoles of budding yeast cells have been studied.

Fission, budding, fragmentation, and the formation of rhizomes and stolons are some of the mechanisms that allow organisms to reproduce asexually. The hydra produces buds; starfish can regenerate an entire body from a fragment of the original body.

Nonsexual means of reproduction which can include grafting and budding. Autosome. A chromosome that is not involved in sex de- termination. B beta-DNA. The normal form of DNA found in biological systems, which exists as a right-handed helix.

The first is cell division by budding. This process of asymmetric cell division results in two different kinds of daughter cellsone a motile swarmer cell and the other a stalked nonmotile cell.

So, it's a membrane budding process. So what happens is the viral RNA's code for these 10 virus proteins, they are made in the cell.

The virus acquires its membrane when it is released from the cell by budding (exocytosis).
The host cell is not necessarily killed.
Click here for more details on viral reproduction in animal cells.

binary fission mostly; budding
mitosis and meiosis using a spindle; followed by cytokinesis ...

It postulates that species multiply, either by splitting into daughter species or by "budding", that is, by the establishment of geographically isloated founder populations that evolve into new species.
Gradualism.

Asexual reproduction. Nonsexual means of reproduction which can include grafting and budding.
Autosome. A chromosome that is not involved in sex determination.
B ...

Reproduction
Continuation of species or breed, sexually or through cell rupture, cell division, budding, spore formation, conjugation or parthenogenesis.

The virus obtains the lipid molecules from the cell membrane during the viral budding process.

yeast - eukaryotic organisms larger than most bacteria, commonly divides by budding ...

asexual reproduction -- A type of reproduction involving only one parent that usually produces genetically identical offspring. Asexual reproduction occurs without meiosis or syngamy, and may happen though budding, ...

Endocytosis The process of internalization of extracellular material by invagination and budding of the cell membrane.

Asexual reproduction: Any form of reproduction not depending on a sexual process. It involves a single individual. Reproduction by cell division, fragmentation or budding.

See also: Organ, Cell, Cells, Trans, Animal