the mice grew sick and died.
(totally CORRECT, I got this out of a worksheet the teacher gave me so you can count on this answer... OH YES YOU'RE VERY WELCOME, ANYTIME)
When he injected the mice with the heat-killed S bacteria the mice still lived.
Bacteria take DNA from their environment.Bacteria inject DNA into another cell
Bacteria take DNA from their environment.Bacteria inject DNA into another cell
S Strain ---> inject into mice ---> Mice Die R Strain ---> inject into mice ---> Mice Live Griffith was able to kill bacteria by heating them. He observed that heat-killed S Strain bacteria injected into mice did not kill them. When he S Strain (heat Killed) ---> Injected into mice ---> Mice Live S Strain ( heat Killed) + R Strain (Live) ---> Injected into mice ---> Mice Die
A bacteriophage ("eater of bacteria") inject their DNA (or RNA) into the cell.
Bacteriophages (bakTIHReeuhfayjuhz)
Bacteria transfer DNA with a bacteriophage.
you get really high and bite your mom
you have to inject a person with that particular bacteria or virus in a weak form
A poisonous snake has venom glands in which it can inject venom when it bites. A non- poisonous snake has no venom glands and will not inject venom , but they can have harmful bacteria in their mouth.
it doesnt matter unless youre looking for the placebo effect. it has no effect on your workout that day.
A second, more or less.
Yes, a virus can inject itself into another process and stay. If you're on an Administrator account a virus can do just about anything, including inject itself into processes. If a virus injects itself in an important file, it can effect the operating system in a very vital way.