cell clone
1Clone (B-cell biology) — The process of immunological B cell maturation involves transformation from an undifferentiated B cell to one that secretes antibodies with particular specificity[1]. This differentiation and activation of the B cell occurs most rapidly after… …
2Cell culture — in a Petri dish Epithelial cells in culture, stained for keratin (red) an …
3Clone High — The main characters of Clone High: Mr. Butlertron, John F. Kennedy, Cleopatra, Abe Lincoln, Joan of Arc, Gandhi, and Cinnamon J. Scudworth (reclining.) Also known as Clone High U.S.A …
4Clone (cell biology) — Clonal expansion and monoclonal versus polyclonal proliferation A clone is a group of identical cells that share a common ancestry, meaning they are derived from the same mother cell.[1] Clonality implies the state of a c …
5clone — clonal, adj. clonally, adv. cloner, n. /klohn/, n., v., cloned, cloning. n. 1. Biol. a. a cell, cell product, or organism that is genetically identical to the unit or individual from which it was derived. b. a population of id …
6Clone — Contents 1 Biological 2 Computing 3 Entertainment 3.1 Music …
7Clone — Literally a fragment, the word in modern medical science has come to mean a replica, for example, of a group of bacteria or a macromolecule such as DNA. Clone also refers to an individual developed from a single somatic (non germ) cell from a… …
8Clone Saga — The Clone Saga Cover to Web of Spider Man #117 (October 1994), which officially launched the 1990s Clone Saga Publisher Marvel Comics Publica …
9clone — I. noun Etymology: Greek klōn twig, slip; akin to Greek klan to break more at clast Date: 1903 1. a. the aggregate of genetically identical cells or organisms asexually produced by a single progenitor cell or organism b. an individual grown from… …
10clone — 1) n. a group of cells (usually bacteria) descended from a single cell by asexual reproduction and therefore genetically identical to each other and to the parent cell. 2) n. an organism derived from a single cell of its parent and therefore… …