With just
a few kinds of cells, only loosely connected, the sponge manages to produce a variety of asymmetrical shapes, from cups and fans to tubes and piecrust shapes.
Not exact matches
God started with a small party in a garden, moved on toward some pow - wows at alters in the desert, then moved into a moveable tabernacle (
kind of like an Old Testament RV), then reigned in a temple (especially the God - cave
of the Holy
of Holies, then disappeared while giving the Jews the silent treatment for some 400 years, then came back to the temple, then traveled the highways and byways with anyone who wanted to join the fun and whooped it up with society's outcasts and wedding attenders, then moved on to some public forums, then into some clandestine home groups and a
few jail
cells, and eventually made his way into traditional church as we now know it.
David Robert Mitchell's film lives in a
kind of temporal nowhere - land
of modernity and antiquity, where there are
few, if any,
cell phones or computers but plenty
of porn magazines.
Loosing a
few brain
cells every now and the isn't a huge worry, but considering that these MSG - like neurotoxins are in just about ALL
of our foods (anything with natural flavor
of any
kind, malted barley, carregenan, guar, xanthan or vegetable gums, «spices»... the list
of names used to hide the fact that these are neurotoxins is very long) we're all basically consuming LOTS
of these neurotoxins daily.
Previously, our main clue that X and Y had a common ancestry was that they swap a
few small sections during one
kind of cell division, just as pairs
of ordinary chromosomes swap much larger chunks.
Right now they can create very thin layers
of muscle tissue that are a
few layers thick or something, but beyond that, you need a three - dimensional
kind of a structure that provides nutrients in and out and removes waste, keeps the
cells alive essentially.
This unfortunate and rare side effect
of the biopsy provided Nicola Valeri at the Institute
of Cancer Research in London and his colleagues with a
kind of stopwatch — an exact point in time when a
few cells left as the needle was withdrawn began their two year evolution into a tumour.
Just a
few kinds of signals control the fates
of cells that either maintain their stem
cell state, divide or differentiate in a developing organism.
Dr. Paul Eslinger — Yes, and so we have
fewer cells to try to do the same
kind of mental and memory tasks that we're, you know, that we typically do.
Harold Varmus: Well the simplistic way to think about that is and I'm not sure this is the way it will be worked out, is to be able to take just a
few cells from those early lesions and examine them genetically or for other
kinds of marks on the DNA that would predict whether or not this is some - this is a lesion which might or an early stage growth that might never be able to progress, but it is also possible that every early tumor
of that
kind has some probability
of expanding and invading and growing to become a medical problem, so getting that right will obviously be crucial because it's very difficult to say when you've diagnosed something that is an early stage tumor that it won't progress.
This has several positive effects, here's a
few: (a) because blood sugar levels are low, there won't be any further damage to
cells from Glycation (high blood sugar
kind of «fries» a
cell, like a grilled cheese sandwich — literally.)
Chlorella is a single -
celled micro-algae grown in water and is one
of the
few edible species
of it's
kind.
Its
kind of like buying a new
cell phone and then seeing an ad for a better and cheaper one a
few days later... Grrr.
It only took a
few lazy Google searches to find out exactly why: blue light (the
kind of light emitted by devices like computers,
cell phones and iPads) suppresses melatonin, a.k.a. the handy dandy hormone that regulates your circadian rhythm and signals to your body that it's time to go the eff to sleep.
Perhaps to underscore his point, he said that a new project, a piece to be included in an upcoming show organized by the artist Tino Sehgal at the Palais de Tokyo in Paris, will include organisms
of a
kind that
few want to think about, much less admire as art: living cancer
cells, donated by the Curie Institute.
We had to ride south on Avenue Road, keeping as close to the curb as possible on one
of the busiest streets in town in the middle
of rush hour, wondering what
kind of governments hypocritically promote cycling and then neglect to provide any decent routes; that refuse to demand sideguards on trucks like they do in the UK; that refuse to enforce the
few rules about parking or driving in bike lanes; and that refuse to ban
cell phone use while driving when 80 %
of accidents are caused by inattention
of drivers.