We are using cookies This website uses cookies in order to offer you the most relevant information. By browsing this website, you accept these cookies.
Gnostics, and which arose from the attempt to engraft Orientalism upon
2
God again gives the key to real teaching in the word "engraft."
3
These purified muscle stem cells engraft with high efficiency and regenerate serially injured muscle.
4
His lore was engraft, something foreign that grew in him.
5
We therefore conclude that hESCs are capable of generating hematopoietic cells that engraft primary recipients.
6
We have to engraft on despotism those blessings which are the natural fruits of liberty.
7
But there is no use in trying to engraft an opposite nature on one's own.
8
This strategy enabled the generation of human bone and heart progenitors that could engraft in respective in vivo models.
9
Forskolin also enhanced proliferation of mouse satellite cells in culture and maintained their ability to engraft muscle in vivo.
10
Let us not stop in cold admiration, but reflect how we may engraft similar virtues upon our own souls.
11
Despite the down-regulation of hepatocyte function genes, hepatocytes cultured for up to 72 hours could robustly engraft in vivo.
12
One patient did not engraft.
13
To engraft into her infant soul the purest principles of religion was therefore the chief aim of Mary's preceptress.
14
We found that human progenitor cells engraft and differentiate into functional human hepatocytes in the mouse, producing albumin, alpha-1-antitrypsin, and glycogen.
15
The man was shaven-headed, a scar running down from his forehead and over his right eye, which was a double-pupil engraft.
16
Secretory mediators are proposed as one mechanism for stem cell effects because very few stem cells engraft after injection into recipient animals.