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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Heterologous

Heterologous \Het`er*ol"o*gous\, a. [Hetero- + Gr. ? proportion.] Characterized by heterology; consisting of different elements, or of like elements in different proportions; different; -- opposed to homologous; as, heterologous organs.

Heterologous stimulus. (Physiol.) See under Stimulus.

Heterologous tumor (Med.), a tumor differing in structure from the normal tissues of the body.

Wiktionary
heterologous

a. 1 Having different relationships or different elements 2 (context biology English) Of, or relating to different species

WordNet
heterologous
  1. adj. not corresponding in structure or evolutionary origin [syn: heterologic, heterological] [ant: analogous, homologous]

  2. derived from organisms of a different but related species; "a heterologous graft" [ant: autologous, homologous]

Wikipedia
Heterologous

In medicine a heterologous transplant means 'between species' or 'from one species to another'.

In cell biology and protein biochemistry, heterologous expression means that a protein is experimentally put into a cell that does not normally make (i.e., express) that protein. Heterologous (meaning 'derived from a different organism') refers to the fact that often the transferred protein was initially cloned from or derived from a different cell type or a different species from the recipient. Typically the protein itself is not transferred, but instead the 'correctly edited' genetic material coding for the protein (the complementary DNA or cDNA) is added to the recipient cell. The genetic material that is transferred typically must be within a format that encourages the recipient cell to express the cDNA as a protein (i.e., it is put in an expression vector). Methods for transferring foreign genetic material into a recipient cell include transfection and transduction. The choice of recipient cell type is often based on an experimental need to examine the protein's function in detail, and the most prevalent recipients, known as heterologous expression systems, are chosen usually because they are easy to transfer DNA into or because they allow for a simpler assessment of the protein's function.

In structural biology a heterologous association is a binding mode between the protomers of a protein structure. In a heterologous association, each protomer contributes a different set of residues to the binding interface. In contrast, two protomers form an isologous association when they contribute the same set of residues to the protomer-protomer interface.

Usage examples of "heterologous".

For heterologous grafts Teena selects spare parts for closest tissue match.