Genetically
in sentence
283 examples of Genetically in a sentence
First, there's
genetically
engineered seeds and organisms.
Did you know rats that ate
genetically
engineered corn had developed signs of liver and kidney toxicity?
Yet almost all the corn we eat has been altered
genetically
in some way.
This man, this "lunatic farmer," doesn't use any pesticides, herbicides, or
genetically
modified seeds.
And I realize, I think, the way I was feeling that way, is on a really deep gut level, I was feeling a lot of shame and embarrassed, frankly, that, in some respects, I had failed at delivering what I'm
genetically
engineered to do.
And that proportion is primarily
genetically
determined.
I can sprinkle a few cells, stem cells from the patient's own hip, a little bit of
genetically
engineered protein, and lo and behold, leave it for four months and the face is grown.
The cells
genetically
know what to do, and they start beating together.
These are normal mammalian cells
genetically
engineered with a bioluminescent gene taken out of deep-sea jellyfish.
These are zebra fish that have been
genetically
engineered to be yellow, green, red, and they are actually available now in certain states.
The salmon on top is a
genetically
engineered Chinook salmon, using a gene from these salmon and from one other fish that we eat, to make it grow much faster using a lot less feed.
He altered this mouse so that it was
genetically
engineered to have skin that was less immunoreactive to human skin, put a polymer scaffolding of an ear under it and created an ear that could then be taken off the mouse and transplanted onto a human being.
So you can have a billion different viruses that are all
genetically
identical, but they differ from each other based on their tips, on one sequence, that codes for one protein.
So the ideas can live on in spite of the fact that they're not being passed on
genetically.
Do you want to see if you're
genetically
compatible with your girlfriend?
I know more about it
genetically.
They found that there was no genetic differentiation between any of the world's oceans of basking sharks: even though they're found throughout the world, you couldn't tell the difference, genetically, from one from the Pacific, Atlantic, New Zealand, Ireland, South Africa.
Because in the moment, they have no way, genetically, of telling the difference between a male and a female, which I find staggering, because they don't know what primers to look for.
They had been pushed
genetically.
Well, we're no
genetically
hardier than our ancestors were 10,000 years ago.
And so coming back to the brain, this is from a
genetically
engineered mouse called "Brainbow."
We've spent the last couple of years pondering this, making a list of the different things that we had to do, and so we developed a new technology, It's software and hardware, that actually can generate thousands and thousands of
genetically
diverse stem cell lines to create a global array, essentially avatars of ourselves.
But imagine a different scenario, where we could have had an array, a
genetically
diverse array, of cardiac cells, and we could have actually tested that drug, Vioxx, in petri dishes, and figured out, well, okay, people with this genetic type are going to have cardiac side effects, people with these genetic subgroups or genetic shoes sizes, about 25,000 of them, are not going to have any problems.
It's
genetically
arrayed.
We
genetically
engineer bacteria.
So that's where we stand at the moment, and I've just got a few final thoughts, which is that this is another way in which biology is now coming in to supplement chemistry in some of our societal advances in this area, and these biological approaches are coming in in very different forms, and when you think about genetic engineering, we've now got enzymes for industrial processing, enzymes,
genetically
engineered enzymes in food.
But the thing that's alarming is a couple of months ago, in Mexico, where Bt corn and all
genetically
altered corn is totally illegal, they found Bt corn genes in wild corn plants.
So this is the preparation that one of my former post-docs, Gaby Maimon, who's now at Rockefeller, developed, and it's basically a flight simulator but under conditions where you actually can stick an electrode in the brain of the fly and record from a
genetically
identified neuron in the fly's brain.
We take our dopamine receptor mutant flies and we
genetically
restore, or cure, the dopamine receptor by putting a good copy of the dopamine receptor gene back into the fly brain.
Genetically, the band-tailed pigeon already is mostly living passenger pigeon.
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