| PHSC | pleuripotent hemopoietic stem cell |
|---|---|
| PMSC | pediatric medical special care; pluripotent myeloid stem cell |
| PSCT | peripheral stem cell transplantation |
| SCF | Skin Cancer Foundation; stem cell factor; subcostal frontal [view] |
| STK | stem cell tyrosine kinase; streptokinase |
| stem cell |
Undifferentiated, primitive cells in the bone marrow with the ability both to multiply and to differentiate into specific blood cells. [See Genomics: Cloning: Stem Cells]
Ãâó: www.cs.uu.nl/people/ronnie/local/genome/s.html
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|---|---|
| stem cell |
There are several kinds of stem cells, only one of which is controversial. Stem cells taken from very early human embryos are the hot button, but these cells also occur in many tissues of adults. In general, a stem cell is capable of developing into a number of different kinds of cells, depending on what chemical signals it receives. In bone marrow, for example, there are stem cells that can develop into several kinds of white blood cells or red blood cells, depending on the body
Ãâó: www.med.umich.edu/genetics/glossary/
|
| stem |
The statement portion of a question.
Ãâó: www.ojp.usdoj.gov/BJA/evaluation/glossary/glossary...
|
| stem cell |
Reproduce indefinitely and have the capacity to develop (differentiate) into a large number of different cell types.
Ãâó: www.hfea.gov.uk/Glossary
|
| stem |
A main stroke that is more or less straight, not part of a bowl. The letter o has no stem; the letter I consists of stem and serifs alone.
Ãâó: www.c-latitude.com/glossary.asp
|
| stem | having a stem or stems or having a stem as specified |
|---|---|
| stem | having the stem removed |
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