recombinant

adjective
re·​com·​bi·​nant | \ (ˌ)rē-ˈkäm-bə-nənt How to pronounce recombinant (audio) \

Definition of recombinant

1 : relating to or exhibiting genetic recombination recombinant progeny
2a : relating to or containing genetically engineered DNA
b : produced by genetic engineering recombinant bovine growth hormone

Keep scrolling for more

Other Words from recombinant

recombinant noun

Examples of recombinant in a Sentence

Recent Examples on the Web

Soleimani had reached out to Mahboobe Ghaedi, a permanent US resident from Iran who has worked in stem cell research and regenerative medicine at several American universities, about getting some recombinant proteins, the indictment says. Kat Brumback, BostonGlobe.com, "Iranian scientists accused of violating US sanctions," 7 July 2019 Impossible Burger has an ingredient that comes from recombinant organisms that is artificial that might put some people off. Angela Chen, The Verge, "These are the technology advances that could end animal farming," 9 Nov. 2018 The Pfenex technology is a proprietary method of making proteins through recombinant genetic technology. Bradley J. Fikes, sandiegouniontribune.com, "Pfenex raises $39.4M for osteoporosis drug," 29 May 2018 Heberprot-P, which contains recombinant human epidural growth factor (EGF), is injected deep into the wound and essentially creates a non-diabetic micro-environment in the foot that aids in healing. Mimi Whitefield, miamiherald, "Cuba exports medicine to dozens of countries. It would like the U.S. to be one of them," 14 Dec. 2017 Altimmune is developing immunotherapy drugs, such as a recombinant flu vaccine administered nasally, a treatment for hepatitis B, and an anthrax vaccine. Sarah Gantz, baltimoresun.com, "Altimmune moving to new headquarters," 22 Aug. 2017 The next step was to place both the phosphotyrosine and the analog at specific sites in recombinant proteins, by swapping out a codon. Bradley J. Fikes, sandiegouniontribune.com, "Scripps, Salk scientists independently make key biological advance," 12 June 2017 In 1975, Paul Berg, a Stanford biochemistry professor, convened what came to be known as the Asilomar Conference to establish safeguards and prohibitions on the conduct of what then was cutting-edge biomedical research — recombinant DNA technology. Ezekiel J. Emanuel, New York Times, "Tinkers and Tailors: Three Books Look to the Biomedical Frontier," 16 Mar. 2017 In the study, the scientists traced back a single peptide using recombinant DNA techniques. Nick Stockton, Wired News, "The Secret History of Spider Venom's Paralytic Power," 11 June 2015

These example sentences are selected automatically from various online news sources to reflect current usage of the word 'recombinant.' Views expressed in the examples do not represent the opinion of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.

See More

First Known Use of recombinant

1940, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Keep scrolling for more

Keep scrolling for more

More Definitions for recombinant

recombinant

adjective
re·​com·​bi·​nant | \ (ˈ)rē-ˈkäm-bə-nənt How to pronounce recombinant (audio) \

Medical Definition of recombinant

 (Entry 1 of 2)

1 : relating to or exhibiting genetic recombination recombinant progeny
2a : relating to or containing genetically engineered DNA
b : produced by genetic engineering recombinant bovine growth hormone

recombinant

noun

Medical Definition of recombinant (Entry 2 of 2)

: an individual exhibiting recombination