Sentence examples for evolved a novel from inspiring English sources

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In London the young Swiss engineer Charles Labelye, entrusted with the building of the first bridge at Westminster, evolved a novel and ingenious method of sinking the foundations, employing huge timber caissons that were filled with masonry after they had been floated into position for each pier.

Humans evolved a novel social structure with regulated marriage and reciprocal mate exchange (Figure 2).

Dissimilarity in structure occurs predominantly in the large lobe, in regions involved in substrate specificity, suggesting Rio2 has evolved a novel mechanism of substrate recognition [14].

Thus it appears that a USMH gene evolved a novel role in the postovulatory coats of a common mammalian ancestor.

Therefore, the absence of ilvH suggests that Nannochloropsis has either lost its ability to negatively regulate IlvB or has evolved a novel regulator.

Thus, Lys-myotoxins evolved a novel nonhydrolytic mechanism to induce membrane damage [ 15, 16] after duplication of an ancestral Asp-PLA2 that was not myotoxic.

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South Africa had not only prompted Gandhi to evolve a novel technique for political action but also transformed him into a leader of men by freeing him from bonds that make cowards of most men.

As introduced above, gene duplication is regarded the first step for evolving a novel gene function.

If patrigenes begin to evolve a novel expression pattern and gain an advantage, matrigenes might evolve a response, but they will get no help from mothers labeling genes in new ways.

A third possibility is that sequences of duplicate pairs can diverge functionally, with one copy evolving a novel function (neofunctionalization) or, alternatively, the ancestral function being partitioned between the paralogs (subfunctionalization; Force et al. 1999; Lynch et al. 2001).

In addition, duplicate genes most likely face three evolutionary fates: (a) nonfunctionalization or pseudogenization might cause one gene copy to lose function; (b) subfunctionalization partitions ancestral gene function in daughter copies; and (c) neofunctionalization leads to one copy retaining its original function and the other evolving a novel function [ 50, 51].

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