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the emigrated
verb
To leave the country in which one lives, especially one's native country, in order to reside elsewhere.
Exact(3)
Langerin mAb was predominantly incorporated into the emigrated LC as indicated by a large increase in mean fluorescence intensity upon permeabilization.
Whole cell extracts for western blot analysis were obtained from alginate beads, from medium (containing the emigrated, swimming spheroids) and from adhered colonies.
For this purpose, we co-injected 25 μg poly I C together with the targeting mAb into skin biopsies and examined the emigrated skin DC after 4 days of explant culture with flow cytometry.
Similar(53)
Muslims have begun replacing the emigrating Christians, and now Malula — once entirely Christian — is almost half Muslim, residents say.
The emigrating mother was trained as a bank associate but ends up working at a White Castle.
The emigrating cell number and expected migration distance are closely correlated (r = 0.984, P<0.001).
Clones that do not emigrate will have a net growth advantage over the emigrating clone, which should be quickly driven extinct [4], [5].
Here, dact1 has taken over dact2 expression domains such as the emigrating cranial neural crest cells.
But not only the emigrating cells, the vascular endothelium takes actively part in the extravasation process, too.
In some instances, due to immigration restrictions, the emigrating health professionals are not allowed to take along their families.
Virions opsonized with complement produced higher levels of infection in the emigrating DCs than free HIV-1.
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