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Discover LudwigThe phrase "prone to being lost" is correct and usable in written English
It can be used to describe something or someone that is likely to get lost or is susceptible to being misplaced.
Example: "The keys are often prone to being lost, so it's best to keep them in a designated spot."
Alternatives: "likely to get lost" or "susceptible to being misplaced."
Exact(1)
Such pathways preferably use homologous sequence in close proximity to the DSB (McVey and Lee 2008), and if DSB repair underlies the precise loss of introns, we expect shorter introns to be more prone to being lost.
Similar(59)
So, data packets are more prone to be lost than ACKs due to the longer length.
This result can be explained if LFY is prone to be lost by drift due to a low probability of subfunctionalization or neofunctionalization.
Adjacent introns were prone to be lost simultaneously in Dictyostelium discoideum.
Therefore, of all the UUL-encoding genes, WDSUB1 is clearly the one most prone to be lost.
A large scale survey also observed that the plasmids of blaNDM-1 positive transconjugants are prone to be lost in the absence of imipenem selection [ 13].
The advantage of targeting to this locus is that the integrated Cre is less prone to be lost by pop-out recombination.
Therefore, they are more prone to be lost to the electrodes (as revealed from simulations) in the converging section of the IFT that immediately follows the exit gate.
The lower amount of genes in Me. pennsylvanicum might be the result of the host jump to a dicot plant, as many genes that are related to colonizing grass hosts will not produce effector proteins that match the divergent targets in the new host environment and are thus prone to be lost.
As a result, these valuable data which are key to research on aging and are recorded in numerous laboratories around the world, sometimes as a result of year-long efforts, are currently not publicly available nor accessible and prone to be lost when researchers move on to new positions.
Its many adaptor dongles, while effective in theory, are prone to breaking or being lost.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com