Words similar to reconstitute
Example sentences for: reconstitute
How can you use “reconstitute” in a sentence? Here are some example sentences to help you improve your vocabulary:
It can appropriate pieces of its victims' anatomies in an effort to reconstitute itself (an idea cribbed from Clive Barker's 1987 Hellraiser --but less gorily executed, for the sake of a kiddie-friendly PG-13).
However, in the context of signaling through the BCR, we surprisingly found that kinase inactive Btk:ER could reconstitute calcium mobilization in these Btk-deficient cells (Fig 2C).
Reading further on the front page does reveal the possibility of an expanded no-fly zone, but mainly yields the "information" that after the action, the U.S. will "put in place a post-strike program that would strengthen and potentially broaden the U.N. mandate inside Iraq," which the reader "learns," will "reconstitute" the U.N. weapons inspection team to "make it more effective as it searches for weapons."
In contrast, we predicted that homologous recombination between the truncated Neo sequences in the targeting vector and Neo sequences within Hnf3αΔpgk-Neo ES cells would reconstitute expression of active neomycin phosphotransferase and so confer resistance to G418.
The recE gene product of the Rac prophage converts dsDNA ends into 3' protruding single-stranded form and the recT gene product promotes recombination by annealing them with a homologous DNA in its vicinity (for review, see [ 7 8 ] ). This recombination may result in one progeny DNA (non-conservative recombination) or two progeny DNAs (conservative double-strand break repair) [ 9 ] . In a recBC sbcBC background, a ds end stimulates homologous recombination that results in only one progeny DNA (non-conservative recombination) [ 10 ] . Analysis of the stimulation of recombination by replication (for review, see [ 11 ] ) and analysis of altered chromosomal replication (for review, see [ 12 ] ) led to the proposal that a chromosomal ds break formed during replication fork arrest triggers homologous recombination, which would reconstitute a replication fork (for review, see [ 5 ] ).