Sentences Generator
And
Your saved sentences

No sentences have been saved yet

"progenitor" Definitions
  1. a person or thing from the past that a person, animal or plant that is alive now is related to synonym ancestor
  2. a person who starts an idea or a development

279 Sentences With "progenitor"

How to use progenitor in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "progenitor" and check conjugation/comparative form for "progenitor". Mastering all the usages of "progenitor" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The pontoon bridge's progenitor is a man named Parker Shinn.
Dr. Song and Dr. Ming were betting the Zika virus targeted neural progenitor cells; they had long studied microcephaly cases unrelated to the Zika virus and knew progenitor cells were damaged in those cases.
Microscopic image showing cell death of the human neural progenitor cells.
But you can't email the chain's progenitor and asked to be removed.
It's likely a progenitor of many more attempts like it to come.
Still, J.C. is without a doubt a progenitor of Amoruso's GirlBoss model.
Its progenitor, Ray Dalio, has likened the company to a nudist camp.
Neurons are created by progenitor cells, also called precursor or stem cells.
Its combination of old and new aesthetics makes its distinctive from its progenitor.
Like those roaring-rampage-of-revenge progenitor films, Deadpool is a stylized ride.
Brown, its progenitor and foremost evangelist, could not contemplate leaving its fate unresolved.
Take Slacker, a progenitor of indie cinema that kicked off Richard Linklater's career.
A written work is a new life created by the author as progenitor.
The campaign was launched by #OscarsSoWhite progenitor ReignofApril and the hashtag spread like wildfire.
Its most obvious (if unlikely) progenitor is the Moscow metro, which opened in 1935.
The IAAM's progenitor was Joseph Riley, Charleston's mayor for four decades until last year.
But I want to glance at the '70s, the real progenitor of the '80s.
Maybe the enemy is really inanimate; maybe, epically, your nemesis is your own progenitor.
She is also the progenitor of our own morning-after brunch conversations with our BFFs.
Zan knows the progenitor aliens are eating their young alive, and this needs to stop.
The virus attacked neural progenitor cells much more aggressively than the neurons or stem cells.
Britain is the world's fifth largest economy, the progenitor of democracy and the industrial revolution.
Not to mention the physical Google Wifi is less than half the size of its progenitor.
Origins is chronologically the first game in the series, starring a progenitor of the Assassin's Brotherhood.
The progenitor of this starry deluge is the grand dame of unattainable lifestyles herself, Martha Stewart.
The similar personalities of progenitor and offspring often amplified the problems of parenthood, rather than diminishing them.
Progenitor cells are generated from stem cells and share some, but not all, of the same properties.
THE progenitor of Japan's imperial line, supposedly 2,600 years ago, was female: Amaterasu, goddess of the sun.
Shelley's novel is recognized today as the progenitor of the modern genres of science fiction and horror.
Aaliyah, who was alluring even when rejecting overtly sexy looks, is also a progenitor of modern fashion.
In Garching, Nugent thought to check the historical record for evidence of precursor explosions from iPTF14hls's progenitor star.
The cells self-assemble into spheres that contain neural progenitor cells, or cells that will become brain cells.
The mythical Yellow Emperor enjoys an approved cult status in China as the progenitor of the Chinese race.
But he is also gaffe-prone and the progenitor of a series of undiplomatic comments about other peoples.
To paraphrase internet humor progenitor Strong Bad, the gift of metal does not smile on the good-looking.
The progenitor of all digital marketplaces led the way, and its enabling technology was dial-up internet and email!
It's even set a few short scenes in the distant past, when the family's progenitor first immigrates to America.
But in this instance you may call the accelerator a fast follower rather than a progenitor of this trend.
Arriving after years of fan speculation and hope, it was the progenitor of modern nostalgia-based sequels and reboots.
But the company's progenitor, Ferruccio Lamborghini, first created his car company to stand in contrast to Enzo Ferrari's enterprise.
The results suggested that the Zika virus was most dangerous in the first trimester, when most progenitor cells form.
In this will to supreme combination, he resembles Thomas Pynchon (with Joyce the blessed progenitor), or David Foster Wallace.
The store, like its Chelsea counterpart and its TriBeCa progenitor, plans to host book signings, panel discussions and performances.
They view the strongman as Europe's most accomplished progenitor of the type of illiberal democracy to which they aspire.
In some ways, Soylent may suffer from being a progenitor of an investment thesis which has passed it by.
Reagan made his historic 1982 speech on democracy and liberty to the progenitor of modern democracy, the British Parliament.
The 1932 film The Mummy is an unlikely progenitor of one of the major summer movie revivals of 2017.
Or tracking the entropy of every pseudoparticle (?) in this 2,000 cubic-kilometer general relativistic magnetohydrodynamic rendering of a supernova progenitor!
The virus is shown in green, vulnerable neural progenitor cells are shown in red, and neurons are shown in blue.
This also means the Wright as the progenitor of the movement will become an important voice in its corporate growth.
Fetal brains are chock full of neural progenitor cells, which are responsible for making cells that form key brain structures.
If Bannon is the intellectual godfather of many of Trump's views, Sessions was the policy progenitor of Trump's White House.
While DNA testing showed that the boyfriend was the progenitor, the court declared that the mother's husband was the legal father.
Like its progenitor, this smart speaker struggles to hear voice commands when the speaker is playing audio at a high volume.
The ethnic Manchus who founded China's last imperial dynasty, the Qing, claimed that their progenitor was conceived on its alpine slopes.
Brianna Rader—founder of Juicebox, progenitor of Slutbot—has spoken about how difficult it is to do market research on sex.
This tragic prehistory re-emerged in the novel, which depicts the perils of parenthood and a creature that destroys its progenitor.
Illustration of normal cellular development of neural stem cells during neurogensis, from self-renewing progenitor cells (NPCs) to fully mature neurons.
It made the Lite feel a lot like Nintendo's old Wii U gamepad—the cumbersome, bulky progenitor of the Switch family.
This also left the Piëch and Porsche families, descendants of Ferdinand Porsche, the progenitor of both firms, as the biggest shareholders.
Like its progenitor and the hugely popular Roblox, the game's biggest selling point is the content creation tools it launches with.
The text has also been corrected to show that cold coastal water, not cold air, is the progenitor of desert conditions.
If the U.S., the progenitor of the liberal trade order, sharply reverses course, our trading partners will take "me-too" restrictive actions.
Dr. Zheng noted that Zika took about three days to kill its progenitor cell victims, and did not kill all of them.
Norris has always had a way of always staying one step ahead of the trends in hardcore, a perpetual progenitor of provocation.
Stone and Corsi are, respectively, the progenitor and the expositor of the world view of the current President of the United States.
The burst came from a progenitor star that was 4.5 billion light-years away, according to the studies—relatively close, astronomically speaking.
Clinton is secretly wrathful appears in another familiar motif in these books: She's a thrower, the progenitor of her own asteroid belt.
Rumours, though, was the form's progenitor, a singular record that made theatre of its members' cobweb of romantic entanglements without sacrificing quality.
The current building was erected in 1891, on Calhoun Street, named for Vice-President John C. Calhoun, the intellectual progenitor of secession.
Another leading progenitor, Building Excellent Schools, claims credit for creating 1003 no-excuses schools serving more than 21,000 students across the country.
Just because scientific methods eventually made it possible to know the genetic progenitor doesn't mean that societies always embraced biological definitions of paternity.
Still, it exists as a pioneering piece of cinema and a highly influential progenitor for onscreen special effects and ambitious sci-fi narratives.
But it's also potentially the progenitor of a new form of surveillance—one that invades our privacy while wearing the cloak of entertainment.
Its progenitor, an art director from London named Peter Chadwick, says he wanted to share the images with anyone who might be interested.
The lead therapeutic program, FX-322, is intended to regenerate hair cells through the activation of progenitor cells already present in the ear.
Stem and progenitor cells are also found in the spongy marrow within some bones and in the blood that circulates around our bodies.
The hundreds of millions—even billions—of resulting stem and progenitor cells can jumpstart the generation of protective blood cells in the recipient.
His latest release, "Sextet (Parker) 1993," is an 11-CD set collecting live performances of tunes associated with Charlie Parker, the bebop progenitor.
And while Facebook was Libra's progenitor, it would be overseen by the Libra Association, a group that included 28 initial partners, including PayPal.
Complex organs, like the heart, will be harder to grow than those like the pancreas which has a single kind of progenitor cell.
Blocboy, by contrast, raps with infectious exuberance and percussive force, a deep-voiced, obstinately masculine twister of syllables and progenitor of surreal inflections.
The hundreds of millions -- even billions -- of resulting stem and progenitor cells can jump start the generation of protective blood cells in the recipient.
EGF is derived from the progenitor cells of the human fibroblast taken from Korean newborn baby foreskin – which helps to generate collagen and elastin.
The researchers' paper was published in the journal Nature, and named the subtypes as: - Squamous - Pancreatic Progenitor - Immunogenic - Aberrantly Differentiated Endocrine eXocrine, or ADEX.
"The really sad news is not only can the virus infect neural progenitor cells, but it turns them into a factory," Dr. Song said.
Tucked away in an unremarkable-looking north London building is a robot that looks and feels like the progenitor for "Pacific Rim"-style mechs.
Now David Coleman, the CEO of the College Board — and a progenitor of Common Core — will institute an "adversity score" for SAT test-takers.
For the study, the researchers searched for progenitor cells and young neurons in 59 postmortem and postoperative human tissue samples taken from the hippocampus.
It was the progenitor of the Luting clan, a mythic rebel general named Lu Xun, who swam to Hong Kong Island from the mainland.
Writing in Time Thursday, Pepe's progenitor Matt Furie says he's reclaiming the creature from the dark corners of the internet in which he currently resides.
With Type II-P supernovas, the "progenitor" star contains enough hydrogen in its outer shells to get ionized by the supernova shockwave and turn opaque.
To find the first heartbeat, the researchers made movies of mouse embryos as they developed in a dish, zooming in on the heart progenitor cells.
Paul Hill, the intellectual progenitor of the portfolio model, reckons that 40 school districts, most of them large and urban, have now adopted this method.
Teams in Brazil and at the University of California, San Diego have also found that the virus attacked neural progenitor cells and shrank brain organoids.
What Browne failed to mention was that he was insulting his intellectual progenitor; with "Natural History," Pliny had essentially invented the genre of the encyclopedia.
Medea is an early antiheroine in literature, and the progenitor of all the alienées whose crimes are a reproach to the hypocrisies that underpin civilization.
Our third beer was Progenitor from Crooked Stave in Denver, tart and modestly funky, with a telltale, well-integrated aroma that comes from dry hopping.
O'Brien pointed out that Hanks had been the progenitor of the nickname "Coco," which O'Brien now uses constantly — including in his brand name, Team Coco.
Yes, The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance will, like its progenitor, freak you and your kids right the hell out in all the best ways.
He was not merely a hitter of towering home runs, but the progenitor of our contemporary conception of what it means to be a celebrity.
In many ways, it feels like a progenitor to games like Soma or Layers of Fear, despite the wide gap of visual difference between those works.
Prior research has shown the Zika virus attacks neural progenitor cells - a type of stem cell that develops into different types of nerve or brain cells.
This starts with Prince Vladimir the Great, the tenth-century ruler of the Kievan Rus proto-state that Russians see as the progenitor of their own.
The star ingredient, progenitor cells, were extracted from the foreskin of a single Korean baby, and then cloned, mixed with proteins, and blended into a serum.
For instance, they can differentiate into more than one kind of cell like stem cells, but unlike stem cells, progenitor cells cannot divide and reproduce indefinitely.
The Johns Hopkins researchers needed time to grow more neural progenitor cells, but Dr. Zheng started anyway, first on brain tumor cells he infected with Zika.
La Follette was progenitor of the Wisconsin Idea, whose core value was symbiosis between the University of Wisconsin and the state government in developing public policy.
Samumed hopes to manipulate the pathway that makes these progenitor stem cells spring into action, so that they don't cause conditions like hair loss or osteoarthritis.
"But no one until now has recognized how their presence tells us something important about the progenitor," the exploding white dwarfs, he said in an email.
This little guy has all the elements of a Big Mac (recall the jingle?), only far less-messy — and far less gut-busting — than its progenitor.
I could find hardly any information on "one o'cat", "two o'cat" or "three o'cat", the last essentially being the progenitor of baseball, if I understand correctly.
Frequency's focus is on developing small molecule drugs that activate dormant progenitor cells, types of stem cells, to repair damaged cochlear hair cells and restore hearing.
Samumed hopes to manipulate the pathway that makes these progenitor stem cells spring into action so that they don't cause conditions like hair loss or osteoarthritis.
The actor's breast pocket was labeled, "VSKIJ," an allusion to the Russian director Konstantin Stanislavkij, the progenitor of what came to be known as method acting.
Twitter is part of the web, but it could have been the progenitor of another kind of non-HTML web had it not locked down its APIs.
The RSS, which acts as both the activist base and spiritual progenitor of the BJP, got its allies in the government to talk him out of it.
Any honest accounting will, he suggests, call Newt Gingrich, the former Speaker of the House of Representatives, the modern progenitor of a conservative politics of personal destruction.
Although Bitcoin can be credited with bringing blockchains—a type of distributed digital ledger—into popular discourse, it wasn't the progenitor of the obscure technology's key features.
La enfermedad de Huntington proviene de un gen dominante: si un progenitor tiene la enfermedad, los niños tienen un 50 por ciento de probabilidades de desarrollarla también.
ARTHUR, the cartoon aardvark, is the progenitor of a famous meme that is used in my office to represent solidarity with anyone under attack by modern life.
Fortnite Battle Royale stands apart from PUBG, in many ways the progenitor of the genre, thanks to its more cartoon-y look and its unique building features.
For its Austrian progenitor, the journalist-turned-economist Carl Menger, it soon led to a petty but legendary Methodenstreit (battle over methods) with a top German economist.
III — both purchased in 1859 as part of a 37-volume set, Classical Library, published by Harper and Brothers (the progenitor of modern-day publisher Harper, of HarperCollins).
III — both purchased in 22019 as part of a 21954-volume set, Classical Library, published by Harper and Brothers (the progenitor of modern-day publisher Harper, of HarperCollins).
And even with the little time I had with it, Bayek comes across as a protagonist you can definitely get behind, and a worthwhile progenitor of the Brotherhood.
"Whatever it is, it must involve some form of energetic and very fast explosion interacting with an extremely dense shell of material very close to the explosion progenitor."
It was, in the words of one encyclopedia of inventions, "pioneering in the field of motion furniture," the spiritual progenitor of sleeper sofas and La-Z-Boy recliners.
He hints that the leftist political rhetoric that is considered the progenitor of cancel culture is to blame for our distraction from other big issues, like gun control.
For example, progenitor cells (similar to stem cells) develop into differentiated cell types with specific functions thanks to transcription factors, proteins that help regulate gene expression in cells.
But Bava, best known as a progenitor of giallo — a lurid, colorful, perverse and blood-drenched brand of Italian horror — would probably have been quite cool with that.
In late 2015 and early 2016, a petition circulated and students protested on campus, calling for the removal of the statue of Cecil Rhodes, a progenitor of apartheid.
Tehran interprets Turkey's Syria policy as primarily a product of a neo-Ottoman ambition to regain clout and empower pro-Turkey Sunnis in territories ruled by its progenitor.
"EGF is derived from the progenitor cells of the human fibroblast taken from Korean newborn baby foreskin - which helps to generate collagen and elastin," Louise writes on her website.
There are many people who believe T.I. and Young Jeezy could lay claim to the progenitor title, but Grazer's done his homework and clearly believes it's all Gucci, baby.
But while Chris Carter's series may have been the modern progenitor, J.J. Abrams made it a mainstream staple, first with Alias' relentless Rambaldi prophecies, then in 2004 with Lost.
The San Diego team reported that Zika overactivated a molecule that normally protects against viruses, and the excess activity seems to switch on genes that galvanize progenitor cell destruction.
Three days after they infected all the cells with the Zika virus, 90 percent of the progenitor cells were damaged: They were unable to divide normally and often died.
An engineer turned policy adviser, Ware wrote the first paper warning of the problems of cybersecurity, in 1967, before Arpanet, the progenitor of the Internet, had even been created.
When I called Bowling a progenitor, I did not mean that all the artists who came after him were nearly as superior (the one exception being Kerry James Marshall).
"Pieces of Time," released a decade later, features Mr. Cyrille and Mr. Graves alongside Mr. Clarke, a bebop progenitor, and Famoudou Don Moye, of the Art Ensemble of Chicago.
A self-proclaimed progenitor of the Insta-memoir, she began to draw notice in 2015, documenting her adventures and romantic exploits while an art history student at Cambridge University.
Zika has already been shown to attack fetal brain cells known as neural progenitor cells - a type of stem cell that gives rise to various kinds of brain cells.
They provide a vision beyond the old identity models of Blackness as the progenitor of the world's offspring, as more real than other people, as an anchor for authenticity.
Earlier research by Tuszynski and colleagues produced some success using just neural progenitor cells, which give rise to new neurons and also help create an environment that encourages damage repair.
"Outcrossing" these lines with each other produces more diverse populations in a controlled way, with detailed knowledge of the progenitor lines allowing the new combinations of genes to be tracked.
As to Palm and webOS, that software was well ahead of its time, serving as the progenitor for many of today's best and most commonly used tropes in mobile design.
Patients with spinal injuries: In a clinical trial of six patients with recent spinal injuries, all regained some motor function after receiving oligodendrocyte progenitor cells, a type of stem cell.
" But the true progenitor of the region's modern mythos was author Vincent Gaddis, who coined and popularized the term "Bermuda Triangle" in a 1964 article titled, "The Deadly Bermuda Triangle.
According to Dr. Mingxing Lei, the first author of the USC study, he and his international team of scientists used progenitor cells, a cell type more differentiated from stem cells.
"Pierre thought all along that I was a bad influence on Yves," Ms. Catroux said, referring to Saint Laurent's former lover, business partner, caretaker and the progenitor of his myth.
"Pierre thought all along that I was a bad influence on Yves," Ms. Catroux said, referring to Saint Laurent's former lover, business partner, caretaker and the progenitor of his myth.
Before Vern Yip transformed rooms on the American television series "Trading Spaces," the popular progenitor to today's home makeover shows, he studied chemistry and economics at the University of Virginia.
Mayer Schiller, a Hasidic rabbi who in the 1990s coached Yeshiva University High School to six consecutive league championships, is recognized as the progenitor of the yeshiva floor hockey scene.
The progenitor for this class of missiles is the Fateh-2628, which has a shorter reported range and warhead weight, and was first unveiled and tested over a decade ago.
Unlike related viruses such as West Nile, Zika virus prefers to infect a certain type of cell found in the fetus known as a neural progenitor cell, their work has shown.
But then she tries to explain that Silicon Valley, the progenitor of self-driving technology, is the enemy of a better transportation future—and that's where I completely disagree with her.
Blackout has a lot in common with the Fortnite progenitor, though because it's built on the Call of Duty foundation it instantly feels more polished and put-together as a shooter.
Back in 2016, the NES Classic was difficult to hunt down, and when it hit in August 2017, the SNES followed suit, managing to even outpace interest in its own progenitor.
It would be fair to say that the Double Down is pure Big Apple, even though the saloon's roots are actually farther west, where its progenitor was founded, in Las Vegas.
We learn about how D.J.s who play prerecorded sets from USB sticks have it too easy and hear arguments about the artistic differences between mass audience EDM and its underground progenitor.
It teases us — an uncredited appearance by a familiar face from "Breaking Bad," the show's progenitor and sequel, brings the story a step closer to what we know lies in store.
Much like its progenitor, the new Ghostbusters is a kid-friendly-enough movie that promises to thrill forever fans while enthralling young viewers and igniting a whole new generation of fandom.
Charting the scam rap scene's rise, Vice's Ryan Bassil points to Detroit as the nexus, Bossman Rich as the progenitor, and Bossman's 2017 track "Juggin Ain't Dead" as the index case.
From the very first cold open of the very first season, it's been clear that Better Call Saul is capable of reaching — even surpassing — the emotional heights of its progenitor, Breaking Bad.
He will go into the record books with 319 career home runs, the exact same number his old man hit, but he was an improvement on his progenitor in most other ways.
This one involves regeneration of the lens itself, enabled by a new surgical method of removing cataract-clouded lenses that leaves enough lens epithelial stem/progenitor cells (LECs) to regenerate new lenses.
Among them is a specialized lab at the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (Ncats), which is testing drugs on neural progenitor cells, hoping to find compounds that can stop the virus.
Craig Steven Wright, the computer programmer who claimed in interviews with the BBC, The Economist and GQ to be the currency's progenitor, said that he had come forward to quell the rumors.
Her father apparently prided himself on being the progenitor of a lighter-skinned African-American clan, and allegedly threatened to disown his daughter should she marry and have children with my friend.
Transcription factors have allowed researchers to program both progenitor cells to become certain specific types of functional cells—and also to do the opposite, programming functional cells to behave as undifferentiated cells.
Apep is one such gamma-ray progenitor system, featuring a massive triple star system at its core—a binary pair and a lone star—and vast spiral arms composed of gas and dust.
At Finless Foods, they take a bit of fish meat and filter it for a particular kind of cell, not so much stem cells but stem-like cells, what they're calling progenitor cells.
In a proof of principle, researchers used neural progenitor cells to grow a kind of splice reconnecting severed nerve fibers coming from the rats' brains to the lower parts of the rodents' bodies.
It's powered by an 80 kWh battery, and the car also claimed a 3 second faster 0 to 60 mph time of around 5.6 seconds, when compared to its gas-guzzling V6 progenitor.
Britain was the progenitor of NATO through the towering figure of Ernest Bevin, foreign secretary in the postwar Labour government: after the United States (a long way after) it is its largest component.
If Lil Wayne and Andre 3000 are two of the most influential artists of the last half-century, Prince is the purple progenitor, the creator of abstruse shades that Crayola could never copy.
Stage mothers were once all the rage, but now it's time to bid farewell to the movie mama as we make room for the latest breed of pushy progenitor—the stove-top parent.
Watch that, or watch what happens with the Countess and Janet, and it's not hard to think that Cupid, the God of love, and Onan, the progenitor of masturbation, might be drinking buddies.
To read The Voice was to read the progenitor of Craigslist and blogging, and of America's underground cultural and political landscape in the second half of the last century and into this one.
Though unquestionably a progenitor of an important strain of Chicago blues, Mr. Rush, in an online interview, denied having had any part in coining the term "West Side sound" to describe his music.
The progenitor of the apocryphal tale is Irwin Hoover, known as Ike, a butler and usher who worked in the White House for 42 years, including during Taft's term, from 1909 to 2803.
Like Bill Evans, his clearest progenitor, Hersch thrives in a trio format, and for the past decade he has led an expert combo featuring the bassist John Hébert and the drummer Eric McPherson.
"I saw it [SFX] as a Wall Street play—that's why I never did a deal with them," Insomniac Events CEO, EDC progenitor, and major SFX competitor Pasquale Rotella told Billboard last month.
Fyodorov is also considered to be the progenitor of the Russian cosmism movement, which dovetailed with the waxing utopian philosophies that formed the rhetorical backbone of the Bolshevik Revolution 100 years ago, in 1917.
The Islamic State recognized the power of digital media early on, when its brutish progenitor, Jordanian jihadist Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, discovered the utility of uploading grainy videos of his atrocities to the Internet.
Essentially, he was the progenitor of the argument that God deliberately placed false flags on Earth, including fossils, and that these skeletal remains did not therefore prove that such exotic ancient lifeforms ever existed.
"So people who were older and people who were younger had the overall same amount of new neurons and progenitor cells, somewhere around thousands," lead author Maura Boldrini, a neurobiologist at Columbia, told Gizmodo.
In the mouse, one week after fertilization, the heart starts off as a flat field of heart progenitor cells—immature cells that came from stem cells and which are gradually becoming real heart cells.
Player Unknown's Battlegrounds, the progenitor and once-reigning champion of last-player-standing battle royale gaming that's swept the video game world by storm, has hit over 400 million players globally across all platforms.
Race has infected discussions of public expenditure in America so insidiously and for so long that it is fair to wonder whether Obamacare would have aroused the same passions had its progenitor been white.
It's been called the progenitor of neo-Dadaism, the wellspring of a vast amount of absurdist millennial humor that's pushed out of its niche Tumblr basement to hit the mainstream corridors of the internet.
By the time Surveyor 23 landed there, the vast basin was already home to its progenitor, Surveyor 1, along with three Soviet Luna landers (5, 9, and 13), and the NASA Ranger 7 impactor.
In 2013, Steve Goldman, a neurologist and neuroscientist at the University of Rochester, injected glial progenitor cells—which develop into specific kinds of human brain cells called glia—into the brains of baby mice.
His lab, serving as the first proof-of-principle cord blood bank for distant obstetric units, began studying the capacity of hematopoietic (blood) stem and progenitor cells to cure disease in the early '80s.
The myth of Steve Jobs: iconoclastic artistic genius, Nietzschean Übermensch, progenitor of the digital revolution who reshaped our domestic lives the same way that the titans of the Industrial Revolution reshaped cities and factories.
The white nationalist and progenitor of the "alt-right" movement submitted a motion to dismiss a federal lawsuit against him and other leaders involved in August's deadly Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia.
The game might share a mechanical resemblance to other text adventures — including the genre's progenitor Colossal Cave Adventure (which Elliott played as a kid) — but it's moodier and more serious-minded than anything I've played.
In the 21848s, pioneering scholarship in American art confirmed that Cole (21849-22005) was the nation's first major landscape artist and progenitor of what would be called (though not by him) the Hudson River School.
The Turinese "outsider" artist Carol Rama — subject of a number of exhibitions this year, in Venice and at the New Museum in New York — was an early progenitor of its growing atmosphere of cultural revolt.
Indeed, the technology is so compelling that Clevers, the progenitor of the company's technology, has agreed to join the company as a co-founder and collaborate on future development, according to an interview with Shen.
" In an editorial accompanying the study, Dr. Stanley H. Appel and Dr. Carmel Armon wrote, "These are clearly early stages of evaluating the risks and benefits of transplanting neural progenitor stem cells in patients with ALS.
Don Hertzfeldt's eerie-yet-cheery "World Of Tomorrow" explores a loopy sci-fi premise, in which a far-future clone named Emily uses time travel to check in on the child who will become her progenitor.
In the wake of Third/Sister Lovers stillborn birth, Chilton would re­in­vent him­self as an iras­cible icon­o­clast, seminal new wave/punk progenitor, and semi-iron­ic in­ter­pret­er of ob­scure soul, R&B, and Itali­an rock 'n' roll.
In his memoirs Jean Monnet, its progenitor, describes a document printed in France on Dutch paper with German ink, gathered in a binding from Belgium and Luxembourg and decorated with a bookmark woven from Italian silk.
In April, the team and other collaborators published a study in the journal Cell showing that this assault by Zika resulted in undersize brain organoids: Damaged progenitor cells created fewer neurons, leading to less brain volume.
LONDON (Reuters) - Pixies frontman Black Francis has been called many things in his time - surrealist poet, alt-rock progenitor and singer in "one of America's greatest bands ever," that last one according to Bono of U2.
They didn't write much like that in 1904, though Knut Hamsun, in 1890, and Jens Peter Jacobsen, in 1880, and above all Dostoyevsky, the great progenitor, had all sounded something like this, not so long before.
Dear Esther is the progenitor of this movement we've come to call the walking simulator, uh, or certainly one of the foundational cornerstones of, and a fantastically atmospheric wander around an isolated outpost of the British Isles.
"Similarly to other known UCDs that harbor black holes, UCD3 hosts metal rich stars enhanced in α-elements that support the tidal stripping of a massive progenitor as its likely formation scenario," the study&aposs abstract reads .
With Buck Owens, Haggard was a progenitor of what became known as the "Bakersfield Sound," an alternative to the more maudlin "Nashville Sound," and an early iteration of what would become known as roots rock or Americana.
"The cells produce more virus and they actually can spread it," said Dr. Ming, adding that infected cells appear to create a "bystander effect," releasing chemicals as they die that damage or kill neighboring uninfected progenitor cells.
The Met's exhibition of the nation's first major landscape artist and progenitor of what would be called the Hudson River School is gorgeous, politically right for right now and a lesson in the mutability of art history.
Polzine first encountered her honey cake's progenitor, the medovik torte — seven or eight cookielike layers alternating with sour-cream frosting — on a cake-tasting tour of Vienna, Prague and Budapest, where she visited dozens of traditional coffeehouses.
Like bone marrow, cord blood is unusually rich in hematopoietic stem cells -- which can give rise to every type of blood cell -- and their more developed descendants, progenitor cells, which are more limited in what they can become.
Zika seems to do its damage in unborn brains because the virus targets neural stem and progenitor cells; it has less of an effect on adult brains likely because they contain fewer active stem cells, the researchers said.
But Rotenberg points out that after a series of incidents over the years—including one related to Google+ progenitor Google Buzz—the Federal Trade Commission could take up the incident in context of the company's larger track record.
Zika's effect on the brain's neural stem cells is under investigation with one study showing that the virus reduced neural progenitor cells by a third, which suggests that Zika could cause brain defects even among children without microcephaly.
The idea of Jack as the progenitor of "Penny Lane" is as playful, as implausible, and every bit as encouraging as the notion that the bumbling bookseller in "Notting Hill" could capture the heart of a movie queen .
We've enlisted the help of Bob Collymore, CEO of Kenya's mobile network provider, Safaricom (and the progenitor of M-PESA — Africa's leading mobile currency), along with Facebook's Uche Ofodile, and BRCK CEO Erik Hersman to provide the best prescriptions.
During the Second World War, when Surrealism and its progenitor, psychoanalysis, were in full, disquieting bloom, the choreographer Léonide Massine collaborated with Salvador Dali on several ballets, including one, "Mad Tristan" (1944), set to excerpts from Wagner's great opera.
In the 1990s, after graduating from college in his native Rio de Janeiro and earning an M.F.A. at the Art Institute, he made a name for himself as a progenitor of "bio art," meaning art made with living matter.
Unlike Bernie Sanders, the progenitor of the Warren policy, the Massachusetts senator has declined to explain how she would pay for her plan to transition all Americans into the popular Medicare program that now only serves people over 65.
Back in those early days, the galaxy was smaller and had a different structure, so Gallart and her colleagues refer to this version as the "Milky Way progenitor," or the "primitive Milky Way," which was distinct from its modern incarnation.
But Asian American visual media has been booming online much longer, and a more accurate progenitor for "Kids Table" would be the work from Wong Fu Productions, an indie digital production company co-founded by Philip Wang and Wesley Chan.
The book, conceived of and published by Apple, is a glossy $300 (that's for the plus size; it's $200 for a smaller version) tribute to the last 20 years of the company's industrial design legacy, and to its progenitor, Steve Jobs.
His credentials include his origins as the son of rural immigrants to a tough, working-class part of Istanbul, having worked as a pushcart vendor of simit, Turkey's sesame-sprinkled progenitor of the bagel, and a pithy, populist style of delivery.
The superstitious in the party will be nervous, not because the number 13 suggests misfortune in China—it doesn't—but because the progenitor of five-year plans, the Soviet Union, had barely embarked on its 13th one when it collapsed.
The progenitor of the World Wide Web has streamlined his internet activism efforts into a project known as Solid, in which he and his MIT cohorts are attempting to return ownership of social media data to the users that create them.
For Cohen and DeLong, the adoption of such breakthroughs by the private sector epitomizes the way capitalist economic development actually operates, as opposed to the fairy-tale idea of the completely free, unregulated market as the sole progenitor of economic innovation.
The patient first went through months of the brutal chemotherapy that makes up the first-line treatment, followed by a stem-cell transplant — in which progenitor blood cells from a donor are transfused into circulation to replace the patient's diseased cells.
Thus, by the time a project was established enough to be evaluated, its progenitor had moved on, and the replacement was not usually sufficiently interested in his predecessor's enterprises to spend time and money figuring out whether they had succeeded.
Although it subsequently faded from memory, "The Court of Last Resort" stands as the progenitor of one of today's most popular true-crime subgenres, in which reporters, dissatisfied with the outcome of a criminal case, conduct their own extrajudicial investigations.
The Greeks themselves often claimed that his whole line had been under a curse from the very moment that its progenitor had committed sacrilege by trying to serve the gods human flesh for dinner (human sacrifice ran in the family).
With some additional arrangements, they went on to form the basis of a new album, released in 2001 on the British label Mo'Wax, which had sought him out as a progenitor of the lush, trippy sound it was known for.
The ability to keep progenitor cells alive at the injury site is a big advantage, said Dr. Stephen Badylak, a professor of surgery and deputy director of the McGowan Institute for Regenerative Medicine at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center in Pennsylvania.
Britain's exit is not a success for the EU. Its second-largest economy, one of its two serious military powers and the progenitor of the single market, is walking out because it felt it could not tolerate one-size-fits-all membership.
In particular, the virus is attacking and infecting what are called cortical neural progenitor cells—types of neural stem cells that give rise to the brain's cerebral cortex (the largest part of the human brain, and the part associated with higher brain function).
The approach couldn't be more different than the one that propelled Rubin's previous venture through a riptide of Silicon Valley buzz last year, helping to ignite an industry-wide live video craze that ultimately pushed its progenitor into the wake of bigger latecomers.
Scientists had learned that, like bone marrow, cord blood is unusually rich in hematopoietic stem cells—which can give rise to every type of blood cell—and their more developed descendants, progenitor cells, which are more limited in what they can become.
But he never forgets the plant's symbolic heft: In Hawaiian myth, the Sky Father's first son was believed stillborn and buried, only to rise from the grave as taro to become a brother to the god's second, human son, the progenitor of mankind.
The project's progenitor, NKSV, serves up noodly, hard-charging, 80s-flavored heavy metal mixed with power metal bombast, thrashy breakaways, and screechy, distorted, black metal-inflected yelps that somewhat unnervingly recall both vintage Children of Bodom and early Leviathan's lo-fi sickness.
The new mass detection "is interesting because it informs our understanding of how supernovae form neutron stars (and how massive the progenitor stars must be)," said lead author Thankful Cromartie, a graduate student in astronomy at the University of Virginia, in an email.
Ettore Sottsass, for example, the Milan-based polymath who later became famous as the progenitor of Memphis design, contributed a residential interior consisting of a set of nearly identical multipurpose "containers" that satisfied all possible household needs and could be endlessly moved around.
The progenitor of the navigational database paradigm was Charles Bachmann, who in 1973 offered the following in a now-famous lecture: "This reorientation will cause as much anguish among programmers as the heliocentric theory did among ancient astronomers and theologians," Bachman promised.
" Also the Christian streak that runs through the work of Chance the Rapper, J. Cole and Kendrick Lamar — the one that Mr. West is a progenitor of, dating back to "Jesus Walks" — is here on "Ultralight Beam" and "Father Stretch My Hands Pt. 2.
ISSUES of safety aside, the very idea of cloning people—of taking, say, a cell from the skin of a man or a woman and growing it into a new human being with exactly the same genes as its progenitor—is anathema to many.
The siren song of bitcoin's progenitor had been calling out to journalists since Satoshi seemed to exit the cryptocurrency world in 43, leaving behind a technology that—even today, after all the hype cycles—promises to shape the future of everything from money to contracts.
Hersey is often regarded as a progenitor of the New Journalism of the 222s and 1970s, but he couldn't be further from the antic gyrations of Tom Wolfe, Hunter S. Thompson, or Michael Herr, or even the brilliantly rococo self-dramatizations of Joan Didion.
The peculiar way in which the 9/85033 attacks and the assassination of Jamal Khashoggi were orchestrated — using military personnel in civilian clothing, arriving in teams, and the apparent relationships of the attackers with the Saudi ruling elite — all point to a common progenitor.
In 2016, a team led by Marie-Isabelle Garcia, a biochemist at the Université Libre de Bruxelles in Belgium, published work in Development showing that injured stomach tissue in mice re-expressed a protein marker identified previously in progenitor cells from the fetal stomach.
Looking back now, it's easy to see it as an early progenitor of the wholesome meme, which would, in the latter half of the decade, become one of the things that saved many from despair and burnout over increasingly dire climate disaster and geopolitics.
Having settled on oration and documentary filmmaking after an abortive musical career of her own, Jamie is in print a warm but unsparing eyewitness: peeking poignantly from the wings as her progenitor glories, sifting through the jumbo pillbox when he starts to fall apart.
Gripper, a South African guitarist, has developed a virtuoso approach to playing Malian music that was originally composed for instruments such as the kora (a 21-string instrument, somewhere between a harp and a guitar) and the ngoni (a possible progenitor of the banjo).
"The black holes were monsters, and the results show that their progenitor stars would have been some of the brightest and most massive in the universe," physicist J.J. Eldridge, who was unaffiliated with the new study, wrote in a News and Views piece accompanying the study.
"Ordinary North Koreans are subject to a heavy diet of state propaganda that paints the North Korean state, specifically Kim Jong-un, as the sole protector, provider, and progenitor of the citizenry," says Markus Bell, lecturer in Korean and Japanese studies at the University of Sheffield.
And given what we now know about the linked nature of the White Walkers and their wight army, it would seem that if the Night King, as the original progenitor of all the other White Walkers and wights, could be killed, it would swiftly end the conflict.
In the second study, published in the journal Cell Stem Cell, researchers at Johns Hopkins and elsewhere cultured several types of cells present in early fetal development, including so-called cortical neural progenitor cells, which form the cortex, the outer brain layer responsible for many higher functions.
His ambitious and environmentally prescient Civilian Conservation Corps, which employed three million men and planted three billion trees in less than a decade, is the progenitor of the "Green New Deal" and various impressive national service proposals, whether proponents of those plans know it or not.
Mr. Young is typically credited as the progenitor of musical Minimalism, and when institutions celebrate that style today — a frequent occurrence this season, with the recent 80th birthdays of Mr. Reich and Mr. Glass — it is fundamentally a commemoration of foundational composers and their influential aesthetic.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads In her current exhibition Recent Paintings at Pace Gallery, Mary Corse demonstrates that she is an active progenitor of multiple male-dominated movements of the sixties and seventies including Hard-edged abstraction, Minimalism, and the West Coast Light and Space movement.
LeCun was the progenitor of convolution neural nets, which today form one of the foundational theories for deep learning AI. He is now chief science advisor for the company, having taken a role as Director of AI Research at Facebook in New York while continuing his professorship at NYU.
A few months after the scaffolds and neural progenitor cells were implanted, nerve fibers from the rats' brains had connected to the new cells, which in turn connected with nerve fibers coming up from the rodents' lower extremities, allowing the rats to move their legs in a deliberate way.
In a June paper in Nature, Holz and collaborators Krzysztof Belczynski, Tomasz Bulik and Richard O'Shaughnessy argued that common envelopes can theoretically produce mergers of 30-solar-mass black holes if the progenitor stars weigh something like 90 solar masses and contain almost no metal (which accelerates mass loss).
It's a transformation playfully shown off in a sequence where New Miles tries to act more like his progenitor by swapping out his crisp button-down shirt for a toothpaste-stained sweater, mussing his hair, lowering his voice a few notches, and sucking all enthusiasm from his tone.
The Walking Dead has made the gradual depletion of its main characters' nuclear family a long-drawn-out theme; The Hunger Games, the progenitor of the current glut of dystopian cinema, literally blew up its main character's sustaining hope that the nuclear family can survive in a dystopia.
As you've probably already figured out, it's a type of duplicity that all but the most gullible parent immediately sees right through, leading to the time-honored "conflict years" between child and progenitor that you've been immortalizing in your country ever since that "Yakety Yak" song was in vogue.
At this year's E3, it was announced that the next game in the Animal Crossing series — arguably the progenitor of such gardening video games alongside Harvest Moon — will be released in March 2020, arriving a full seven years since the last mainline entry in the franchise, Animal Crossing: New Leaf.
If you consider the bad guys just types of human-shaped monsters, your various guns and equipment the equivalent of new swords and wands, breastplates and greaves, with your drones and tactical launchers modern spells and auras, it's really quite a lot like Diablo, the progenitor of the "looter" genre.
The developer's main rationale for constructing the new Tin Building nearly 230 yards from the site of its progenitor was to raise the structure one foot above the 21995-year floodplain, which would have been impossible on the original site because of the looming obstruction of the F.D.R. Drive above it.
Given the maturity and audacity of Hirato Renkichi's writing — a poet who is generally described as the major Japanese Futurist and progenitor of various later Japanese avant-garde poetry groups — it is difficult to assimilate the fact that he died at the early age of 29, after having long suffered pulmonary disease.
A better approach, Dr. Kirkland said, would be to target the processes fundamental to aging that underlie all age-related chronic diseases: chronic low-grade inflammation unrelated to infection; cellular degradation; damage to major molecules like DNA, proteins and sugars; and failure of stem cells and other progenitor cells to function properly.
On June 7, 413, Alan Turing, a British mathematician who has since been acknowledged as one the most innovative and powerful thinkers of the 20th century — sometimes called the progenitor of modern computing — died as a criminal, having been convicted under Victorian laws as a homosexual and forced to endure chemical castration.
" (Glass has hinted that a tribute to Bowie would certainly be appropriate at this year's show.) But if Bowie was remarkably genial ("wasn't hard to talk to, but came better prepared than anybody else," Glass says), Lou Reed played the part one might expect from a progenitor of punk and author of "Metal Machine Music.
Bob Langer, a renowned biomedical engineer at MIT, had teamed up with peer Jeffrey Karp of Harvard Medical school on research showing that cells in the inner ear — they're called progenitor cells, and each of us is born with a fixed number of them — could potentially be manipulated to create new inner ear cells.
A case can be made for him as the progenitor of the pragmatic-progressive strain that leads to Dr. King and, even more, to Bayard Rustin and Obama—disabused of illusions, but insistent that with time the Constitution can be realized in its fullness and that democratic politics are the way to do it.
"The current study combines exquisite 3-D printing with neural progenitor cells to create a synthetic segment of spinal cord that enables some severed nerve fibers to regenerate from neural centers upstream from the injury site into parts of the spinal cord that have lost their normal inputs," Benowitz, who wasn't involved in the study, said by email.
Long before she became a star on the Food Network, beginning in 2002 — she has had nine shows, including "Giada in Italy" — her grandfather, Dino De Laurentiis, produced Federico Fellini's 1954 drama "La Strada" and the 1973 "Serpico," starring Al Pacino, and also owned an early Eataly progenitor called DDL Foodshow in New York City and Beverly Hills.
People will connect his book with Aldous Huxley's "Doors of Perception," and I'm sure Hens had that volume in mind, but if "Nicotine" has a literary progenitor I would say that it is "In Search of Lost Time," in which Proust made the material of seven volumes bloom out of one French cookie dunked in a cup of tea.

No results under this filter, show 279 sentences.

Copyright © 2024 RandomSentenceGen.com All rights reserved.