Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • adjective Common misspelling of hematopoietic.

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word hematopoetic.

Examples

  • "While we now can make almost all types of blood cells from embryonic and adult pluripotent stem cells, the next major challenge is to produce blood stem cells (called hematopoetic stem cells) that might be used in a bone marrow transplant," study leader Igor Slukvin, an assistant professor in the department of pathology and laboratory medicine, said in a university news release. cancer, but more than one-third of patients can't find a well-matched bone immune system.

    Medlogs - Recent stories 2009

  • They also interview first time ISEF finalist Chang Liu about her research on hematopoetic stem cells.

    Friday Links Peggy 2007

  • They also interview first time ISEF finalist Chang Liu about her research on hematopoetic stem cells.

    Archive 2007-05-01 Peggy 2007

  • Biologists at UC San Diego have located the origin of blood stem cells, or hematopoetic cells, in the zebra fish embryo.

    PhysOrg.com - latest science and technology news stories PhysOrg Team 2010

  • Passweg JR, Stern M, Koehl U, Uharek L, Tichelli A (2005) Use of natural killer cells in hematopoetic stem cell transplantation.

    PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles Jan Spanholtz et al. 2010

  • "Our results demonstrate that quiescence is a double-edged sword, protecting hematopoetic stem cells from cellular stress but rendering them intrinsically vulnerable to mutagenesis following DNA damage," said senior author Emmanuelle Passegue.

    dailyindia.com News Feed 2010

  • "Our results demonstrate that quiescence is a double-edged sword, protecting hematopoetic stem cells from cellular stress but rendering them intrinsically vulnerable to mutagenesis following DNA damage," says senior author Emmanuelle PasseguĂ©, PhD, associate professor of medicine (division of hematology/oncology) and a member of the Eli and Edythe Broad Center of

    innovations-report 2010

  • Such error prone repair can result in chromosomal deletions, insertions or translocations and subsequent genomic instability that can contribute to hematopoetic abnormalities.

    PhysOrg.com - latest science and technology news stories 2010

  • DNA repair genomic instability adult stem blood stem cells adult stem cell Stem cell innovation hematopoetic stem cells cell type

    innovations-report 2010

  • Such error prone repair can result in chromosomal deletions, insertions or translocations and subsequent genomic instability that can contribute to hematopoetic abnormalities.

    innovations-report 2010

Comments

Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.