Castration Cage

Castration cell (class: Castrationis);

Castration Cell is a medical term used in modern plastic surgery to describe the process of removing part of one or both testicles (castration or castration/castration surgery). This surgery is performed for a variety of medical reasons, such as testicular cancer, trauma, or to reduce the risk of testicular cancer spreading after cancer has been removed. Cage castration can also be used to sterilize male invertebrate animals such as dogs. In the general theory of molecular genetics, epigenetic regulation of gene transcription is a mechanism, independent of changes in the protein product, that regulates certain aspects of gene expression in a certain part of the genome. In this case, the role of chromatin determines the expression of certain genes distant from the chromosomes in DNA not contained in the chromatin. Sometimes an increase or decrease in the activity of an area outside the genome leads to a change in the activity of a specific gene located inside the chromosome. Activation or inhibition of DNA molecule function in such a situation depends on one or more neighboring regions outside the chromosome (called epigenome elements), which may be in a hyper-oriented, hyper-authorized or hyper-compacted state