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Dictionary
be expressed from
verb
To convey or communicate; to make known or explicit.
Exact(60)
Most (if not all) PRV genes begin to be expressed from the onset of viral expression.
RacB could also be inducibly expressed, whereas the protein could not be expressed from a constitutive promoter, presumably because expression at high levels is lethal.
Alternative splicing not only regulates protein expression, but also allows multiple proteins to be expressed from the same gene resulting in significant proteomic diversity [9].
The function can be expressed from (29) and (30) as follows: (36) The above expression is independent of the code matrix, and thus the ambiguity function in this form cannot be optimized along the spatial frequency dimensions at.
During the later part of pregnancy a milky fluid, colostrum, exudes from the ducts or can be expressed from them.
This seems likely to be the government's position, but concerns will be expressed from some quarters that, even though unification is not on the table, any substantial improvement of Taiwan-Mainland ties could be detrimental to U.S. strategic interests.
The function can be expressed from (29) and (30) as follows: (36).
EC50 and EC95 can be expressed from RASS -1 until RASS -5.
Ribozymes can be expressed from a vector, which offers the advantage of the continued intracellular production of these molecules.
For a monostatic sonar system, the sound propagation can be expressed from an energetic point of view as (3).
Fourteen putative open reading frames were identified, 12 of which were predicted to be expressed from a nested set of eight subgenomic mRNAs.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com