transduce

IPA: trænsdˈus

verb

  • (transitive) To convert energy from one form to another
  • (transitive, biology) To transfer or copy genetic material from one cell or virus into another.
  • (transitive, information) To transfer or convert information from one form or medium to another.
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Examples of "transduce" in Sentences

  • They transduce signals from inside the cell out, and outside the cell in.
  • Mainly I study the sense of touch, and what the molecules are that transduce touch.
  • Have you ever noticed magical abilities to see, feel, hear, move and transduce energy?
  • [36], Duf too might transduce signals to cytoskeletal elements via its intracellular domain, to ensure successful myoblast fusion.
  • Additionally, cocal vectors are more resistant to inactivation by human serum than VSV-G-pseudotyped vectors, and efficiently transduce human CD34
  • AAV serotype 2 (AAV2) is the most widely used AAV vector in clinical trials based largely on its ability to transduce neural cells in the rodent and primate brain.
  • You have people who are drawing coarse hair across strings, which in turn produces sounds which are transduce in an esquisitely designed resonance cavity made of wood.
  • Soon after I returned to Stanford, I conceived of using SV40 as a means for introducing new genes into mammalian cells much in the way that bacteriophage transduce cellular DNA among infected cells.
  • These guys could transduce their extremely exotic genes to their hosts in rare lateral gene transfer events similar, for instance, to those thought to account for intronless pseudogenes integration into the genome of a reverse-transcribed RNA.

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synonyms for transduce
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