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central and role
Our technical assistance to these countries should place special emphasis on inducing the central governments to assume the role of advisor and guide which at an earlier stage foreign experts assumed in dealing with the central governments.
With Julie London enacting the central role with husky-voiced sincerity, the longsuffering heroine is at least attractive.
Caspase play the central role in the transduction of DR apoptotic signals.
Whorf took on a central role among Sapir's students and was well respected.
In his article Observations on the marital metaphor of YHWH and Israel in its ancient Israelite context: general considerations and particular images in Hosea 1. 2, Ben Zvi describes the role of the Gomer in the marriage metaphor as one of thecentral attributes of the ideological image of a human marriage that was shared by the male authorship and the primary and intended male readership as building blocks for their imagining of the relationship .”
The central message, that " the just shall live by his faith " ( 2: 4 ), plays an important role in Christian thought.
She plays a central role in the first part of G. A. Henty's novel Beric the Briton and in a children's novel by Henry Treece.
The modern computer, or Von Neumann machine, would play a central role in cognitive science, both as a metaphor for the mind, and as a tool for investigation.
One role of the Swedish central bank was lending to the government, which was likewise true of the Bank of England, created in 1694 by Scottish businessman William Paterson in the City of London at the request of the English government to help pay for a war.
The People's Bank of China evolved its role as a central bank starting in about 1979 with the introduction of market reforms, which accelerated in 1989 when the country adopted a generally capitalist approach to its export economy.
Even the People's Bank of China has been accorded great latitude due to the difficulty of problems it faces, though in the People's Republic of China the official role of the bank remains that of a national bank rather than a central bank, underlined by the official refusal to " unpeg " the yuan or to revalue it " under pressure ".
Despite this comparison, a fragment of a non-Christian parchment Codex of Demosthenes, De Falsa Legatione from Oxyrhynchus in Egypt demonstrates that the surviving evidence is insufficient to conclude whether Christians played a major, if not central, role in the development of early codices, or if they simply adopted the format to distinguish themselves from Jews.
Filial piety has continued to play a central role in Confucian thinking to the present day.
The American Institute of Chemical Engineers ( AIChE ), established in 1908, played a key role in making chemical engineering considered an independent science, and unit operations central to chemical engineering.
From the 1860s until the present, the party has supported strong central government, and supported the Catholic Church, especially its role as protector of the sanctity of the family, and opposed separation of church and state.
They play a pivotal role in completion stage practices, where an attempt is made to bring the subtle winds of the body into the central channel, to realise the clear light of bliss and emptiness, and to attain Buddhahood.
Khrushchev also called for the Party's role to supervise local organs, economic endeavors and central government activities.
Given the central role under the Constitution of the Soviet Union, the party controlled all tiers of government and social institutions in the Soviet Union.
In fact, although the Copernican heliocentric model is often described as " demoting " Earth from its central role it had in the Ptolemaic geocentric model, neither Copernicus nor other 15th-and 16th-century scientists and philosophers viewed it as such.
The University of Corsica Pascal Paoli at Corte took a central role in the planning.
As filmed in 1932, with Tom Mix in the starring role, the central character differed in that Destry did wear six-guns in that version.
The Democratic Republic of Congo also possesses 50 percent of Africa ’ s forests and a river system that could provide hydro-electric power to the entire continent, according to a United Nations report on the country ’ s strategic significance and its potential role as an economic power in central Africa.
* Dartmoor prison plays a central role in The Lively Lady, American author Kenneth Roberts ' 1931 historical novel taking place during The War of 1812
Dark matter plays a central role in state-of-the-art modeling of structure formation and galaxy evolution, and has measurable effects on the anisotropies observed in the cosmic microwave background.

central and proteins
The structure of the condensed chromosome is thought to be loops of 30 nm fibre to a central scaffold of proteins.
The A1 portion of the A subunit is an enzyme that ADP-ribosylates G proteins, while the A2 chain fits into the central pore of the B subunit ring.
* A large central vacuole, a water-filled volume enclosed by a membrane known as the tonoplast maintains the cell's turgor, controls movement of molecules between the cytosol and sap, stores useful material and digests waste proteins and organelles.
Other rapidly degraded proteins include the protein products of proto-oncogenes which play central roles in the regulation of cell growth.
It has been suggested that long loops on these proteins ' surfaces serve as the proteasomal substrates and enter the central cavity, while the majority of the protein remains outside.
The idea of reverse transcription was very unpopular at first as it contradicted the central dogma of molecular biology which states that DNA is transcribed into RNA which is then translated into proteins.
Recent research has demonstrated that the circadian clock of Synechococcus elongatus can be reconstituted in vitro with just the three proteins of their central oscillator.
With the earlier determination of the structure and central importance of DNA, it became clear that all proteins were being produced in some way from its genetic code, and that this step might form a key control point.
As suggested by the first model, all IF proteins appear to have a central alpha-helical rod domain that is composed of four alpha-helical segments ( named as 1A, 1B, 2A and 2B ) separated by three linker regions.
There is an international effort to identify genes that code for inner dynein arm proteins or proteins from other ciliary structures ( radial spokes, central apparatus, etc.
By computerized analysis of amino acid sequences he predicted that the central rod domain of intermediate filament proteins is composed of four helical segments separated by three short linker sequences.
However the actions of elastic proteins such as Titin are hypothesised to maintain uniform tension across the sarcomere and pull the thick filament into a central position.
The central feature of the cell cycle regulation is a cyclical genetic circuit — a cell cycle engine –- that is centered around the successive interactions of four master regulatory proteins: DnaA, GcrA, CtrA, and CcrM.
In bacteria, 90 % of proteins involved in central metabolism of Salmonella enterica are acetylated.
The virino is a hypothetical infectious particle theorized to be the cause of scrapie and other degenerative diseases of the central nervous system ; it is thought to consist of nucleic acid in a protective coat of host cell proteins.
The central dogma states that nucleic acids act as the information carriers, and thus that DNA & RNA make proteins.
In adult cells, α-internexin is expressed abundantly in the central nervous system, in the cytoplasm of neurons, along with the neurofilament triplet proteins.
All IF proteins share a common secondary structure consisting of three main domains, the most conserved of which is the central α-helical rod domain.
The intima consists of carbohydrates, lipids and proteins and has almost the same volume as the central body.
Both of these fields are closely connected, since both are concerned with the interactions of neurotransmitters, neuropeptides, neurohormones, neuromodulators, enzymes, second messengers, co-transporters, ion channels, and receptor proteins in the central and peripheral nervous systems.
: 1941: Edward Lawrie Tatum and George Wells Beadle show that genes code for proteins ; see the original central dogma of genetics
As seen with the electron microscope, the synaptonemal complex is formed by two " lateral elements ", mainly formed by SYCP3 and secondarily by SYCP2, a " central element " that contains at least two additional proteins and the amino terminal region of SYCP1, and a " central region " spanned between the two lateral elements, that contains the " transverse filaments " composed mainly by the protein SYCP1.

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