Word: cellular
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...enough to matter.” Some of his colleagues bet there was a 99 percent likelihood of discovering weapons, Allison said. He remembers only one colleague who said there was zero chance that anyone would find chemical or biological weapons in Iraq: Molecular and Cellular Biology professor Matthew S. Meselson. Meselson did not return a request for comment. NOT QUITE ‘VINDICATED’Unlike most of his Belfer Center colleagues, Ashton B. Carter had already seen all the cards the Bush administration was holding. A former assistant secretary of defense for international security policy...
...interdisciplinary faculty effort that seeks to serve as a “bridge between the physical and the life sciences,” has been in operation for about a year and a half, according to Sasselov. Team members, whose fields of research range from astronomy to molecular and cellular biology, are exploring the possibility for multiple origins of life and what this means from a biochemical perspective...
...received, though the connection is by no means simple. A panel of medical evaluators at the Department of Health and Human Services concluded that Hannah had been injured by vaccines - and recommended that her family be compensated for the injuries. The panel said that Hannah had an underlying cellular disorder that was aggravated by the vaccines, causing brain damage with features of autism spectrum disorder...
...While the album successfully provokes listeners, it sacrifices some musical quality to its political aims. The “New Amerykah” cover art serves as a blaring warning that the fainthearted and “Hill-Duff” fans should probably sit this one out. Fetuses, cellular phones, black power fists, whips, dollar signs, and a double helix caught in Badu’s afro immediately signal that she has a lot to sing about. In album opener “Amerykahn Promise,” a robotic voice instructs passengers to leave their valuables at home...
...process a little more than six months ago. “Nobody knew which genes were involved in the reprogramming process or whether it occurs randomly,” said Nimet A. Maherali, who works in Hochedlinger’s laboratory and is a teaching fellow for Molecular and Cellular Biology 125: “Stem Cells and Cloning.” “It was a big task to accomplish.” Hochedlinger’s discovery could potentially have therapeutic applications. “We now know the conditions for replacing genes of viruses with small...