other organs such as bowel and bladder. Mental retar-
dation can also occur. It affects approximately one out
ofevery 1,000 newborns in the United States and is the
most frequent disabling birth defect.
spindle A group of microtubules originating from
the centriole that move chromosomes during cell divi-
sion in eukaryotic cells. Spindles attach at the kineto-
chore—a region on the centromere, the area that joins
chromatids.
spin label A STABLE paramagnetic group that is
attached to a part of another molecular entity whose
microscopic environment is of interest and can be
revealed by the ELECTRON PARAMAGNETIC RESONANCE
spectrum of the spin label. When a simple paramagnet-
ic molecular entity is used in this way without covalent
attachment to the molecular entity of interest, it is fre-
quently referred to as a spin probe.
spin-orbit coupling The interaction of the electron-
spin magnetic moment with the magnetic moment due
to the orbital motion of the electron.
spin probe SeeSPIN LABEL.
spin-spin coupling The interaction between the spin
magnetic moments of different electrons and/or nuclei.
In NMR spectroscopy it gives rise to multiple patterns
and crosspeaks in two-dimensional NMR spectra.
Between electron and nuclear spins, this is termed the
nuclear HYPERFINEinteraction. Between electron spins,
it gives rise to relaxation effects and splitting of the elec-
tron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectrum.
See also NUCLEAR MAGNETIC RESONANCE SPEC-
TROSCOPY.
spin trapping In certain solution reactions, a tran-
sient RADICAL will interact with a DIAMAGNETIC
reagent to form amore“persistent” radical. The prod-
uct radical accumulates to a concentration where detec-
tion and, frequently, identification are possible by
ELECTRON PARAMAGNETIC RESONANCE SPECTROSCOPY.
The key reaction is usually one of attachment; the dia-
magnetic reagent is said to be a “spin trap,” and the
persistent product radical is then the “spin adduct.”
spiral cleavage An embryonic development charac-
teristic of protostomes. The developing embryo under-
goes cell division (cleavage) from a four-cell embryo to
an eight-cell embryo, with the cells dividing at slight
angles to one another. None of the four cells in one
plane of the eight-cell stage is directly over a cell in the
other plane (oblique to polar axis).
See alsoRADIAL CLEAVAGE.
spirochetes Long, slender, coiled (looks like a tele-
phone cord) bacteria that cause disease and are sym-
bionts in the stomachs of ruminants. Spirochetes can be
aerobic or anaerobic, free-living or parasitic. All spiro-
chetes are chemoheterotrophs. Three genera exist, Lep-
tospira (cause icterohemorrhagic fever), Treponema
(cause syphilis), and Borrelia(cause Lyme disease).
spleen The spleen is located in the upper left quad-
rant of the abdomen. It has two main functions, acting
as part of the immune system and as a filter. There are
two distinct components of the spleen, the red pulp and
the white pulp. It plays an important role in immune
system activities as part of the lymphatic system.
spliceosome A complex of several snRNA molecules
(small nuclear RNA) and proteins that remove introns
(noncoding mRNA) and splice exons (remaining
mRNA sequences).
splitter A taxonomist who prefers to create taxo-
nomic categories that are narrowly defined, thus end-
ing up with more genera than a lumper, who prefers to
place closely related genera into a single genus.
See alsoLUMPER.
sporangium Atiny closed globe or capsule located
on a sporangiophore in which sporangiospores and
312 spindle