Bacteria
in sentence
644 examples of Bacteria in a sentence
They help to kill all the
bacteria.
The main characters in the story are
bacteria
and viruses.
The real
bacteria
and viruses are so small we can't see them without a microscope, and you guys might know
bacteria
and viruses because they both make us sick.
But what a lot of people don't know is that viruses can also make
bacteria
sick."
The next thing is that virus DNA made stuff that chopped up the
bacteria
DNA.
And now that we've gotten rid of the
bacteria
DNA, the virus DNA takes control of the cell and it tells it to start making more viruses.
But that's not the only way that viruses infect
bacteria.
Instead, it silently slips into the
bacteria'
s own DNA, and it just stays there like a terrorist sleeper cell, waiting for instructions.
And what's interesting about this is now, whenever this
bacteria
has babies, the babies also have the virus DNA in them.
So now we have a whole extended
bacteria
family, filled with virus sleeper cells.
It takes control of these cells, turns them into virus-making factories, and they all burst, a huge, extended
bacteria
family, all dying with viruses spilling out of their guts, the viruses taking over the bacterium.
Well if we can embed biological and chemical networks like a search engine, so if you have a cell that's ill that you need to cure or
bacteria
that you want to kill, if you have this embedded in your device at the same time, and you do the chemistry, you may be able to make drugs in a new way.
It's made by a
bacteria.
Everything is covered in invisible ecosystems made of tiny lifeforms: bacteria, viruses and fungi.
Without water, the
bacteria
won't survive.
All those things, the eggs, the cysts, the bacteria, the viruses, all those can travel in one gram of human feces.
So if we were to go deep now within the bones and the teeth that actually survived the fossilization process, the DNA which was once intact, tightly wrapped around histone proteins, is now under attack by the
bacteria
that lived symbiotically with the mammoth for years during its lifetime.
So those bacteria, along with the environmental bacteria, free water and oxygen, actually break apart the DNA into smaller and smaller and smaller DNA fragments, until all you have are fragments that range from 10 base pairs to, in the best case scenarios, a few hundred base pairs in length.
And using state-of-the-art clean room technology, we've devised ways that we can actually pull these DNAs away from all the rest of the gunk in there, and it's not surprising to any of you sitting in the room that if I take a mammoth bone or a tooth and I extract its DNA that I'll get mammoth DNA, but I'll also get all the
bacteria
that once lived with the mammoth, and, more complicated, I'll get all the DNA that survived in that environment with it, so the bacteria, the fungi, and so on and so forth.
I think of the earliest life as "Life 1.0" because it was really dumb, like bacteria, unable to learn anything during its lifetime.
We use
bacteria
to clean our water.
We learn plants and
bacteria
are primitive things, and fish give rise to amphibians followed by reptiles and mammals, and then you get you, this perfectly evolved creature at the end of the line.
All the while, life around us kept evolving: more bacteria, more fungi, lots of fish, fish, fish.
So it's hubris, it's self-centered to think, "Oh, plants and
bacteria
are primitive, and we've been here for an evolutionary minute, so we're somehow special."
It kills off
bacteria
and molds and other germs within the colony, and so it bolsters the colony health and their social immunity.
White blood cells are our body's defense against bacterial invaders, and when they sense this inflammation due to infection, they will enter from the blood into the lung and engulf the
bacteria.
It sticks, it wiggles its way through between the cell layers, through the pore, comes out on the other side of the membrane, and right there, it's going to engulf the
bacteria
labeled in green.
There's weird
bacteria
living in the water that actually eat and digest rocks to make their own food to live under this ice.
Those fungi and
bacteria
are as highly evolved as humans.
We did things like, we swabbed surfaces around our classroom and cultured the
bacteria
we'd collected, and we dissected owl pellets, which are these balls of material that are undigested that owls barf up, and it's really kind of gross and awesome and cool.
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