51³Ō¹Ļ

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transfection

[trans-fek-shuhn]

noun

Biotechnology.
  1. the insertion into a cell of a bacterial plasmid that contains a foreign virus or genetic material.



transfection

/ ³Ł°łĆ¦²Ō²õˈ“ŚÉ›°ģŹƒÉ™²Ō /

noun

  1. the transfer into another cell of genetic material isolated from a cell or virus

ā€œCollins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridgedā€ 2012 Digital Edition Ā© William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 Ā© HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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51³Ō¹Ļ History and Origins

Origin of transfection1

First recorded in 1964; trans- + (in)fection
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Han then explored high-throughput transwell systems with both compartments but found they didn't account for mRNA transfection of the cells, revealing a gap in the development process.

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This led her to create a platform capable of measuring mRNA transport from the blood compartment to the brain, as well as transfection of various brain cell types including endothelial cells and neurons.

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Indeed MG-LNP transfection did not cause the cells any harm.

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CLAIM: Any vaccine that needs to be shipped and stored at -80 degrees ā€œisn’t a vaccineā€ but a ā€œtransfection agentā€ that will infect your cells and transfer genetic material causing ā€œgenetic manipulationā€ on a massive scale.

From

ā€œAny vaccine that needs to be shipped and stored at -80 degrees isn’t a vaccine. It’s a transfection agent, kept alive so it can infect your cells and transfer genetic material. Don’t let them fool you. This is genetic manipulation of humans on a massive scale. Shut it down,ā€ the tweet falsely stated.

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transfecttrans female