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Definitions

engraft

[en-graft, -grahft] / ɛnˈgræft, -ˈgrɑft /


Example Sentences

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When applied to the skin of mice -the only animal model able to test engineered bacteria to date- they engraft, live and produce the protein.

From Science Daily • Jan. 9, 2024

Jimi also needed chemotherapy to kill off existing cells in his bone marrow so that his edited stem cells would have room to engraft and grow.

From Washington Post • Apr. 28, 2023

But it can take about six weeks for cord blood cells to engraft, so she was also given partially matched blood stem cells from a first-degree relative.

From Seattle Times • Feb. 15, 2022

There were now tests to help predict compatibility and to improve the chances that allogeneic marrow cells would engraft.

From The New Yorker • Jul. 15, 2019

Many experiments have been tried to engraft democratical on monarchical Robert Peel's speech institutions, but how have they succeeded?

From A History of the Nineteenth Century, Year by Year Volume Two (of Three) by Emerson, Edwin