revertent
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Borrowed from French revertent, from Latin revertor, equivalent to revert + -ent.
Pronunciation
[edit]Adjective
[edit]revertent
- Having reverted to a previous (more basic or more natural) state.
- 1979, R. N. Dexter, S. P. Pavlou, Richard M. Kocan, Mutagenicity of Puget Sound Sediment Extracts, page 8:
- As can be seen from the data for the control cultures, the variability in the numbers of revertent colonies observed in the absence of any specific mutant can be quite large.
- 1999, R. Ahmed, Irvin Chen, Persistent Viral Infections, page 337:
- The revertent virus may have escaped immune recognition in the animal in which it arose, but this virus was pathogenic in naive hosts.
- 2004, Maria Stokes, Physical Management in Neurological Rehabilitation, page 350:
- Histochemical staining using antibodies to N, C and rod domain epitopes of dystrophin usually show complete absence of the protein, except for occasional revertent fibres (there are fibres which label normally with antibodies to dystrophin; their origin is not understood; Fig. 20.2F).
- 2009, Konrad Ventana, A Desperado's Daily Bread, page 82:
- The greater the stress, the greater the tendency to revert to occult practices and an earlier stage of intellectual development, and these revertent ideologies thereby compete for acceptance.
Noun
[edit]revertent (plural revertents)
- (medicine, obsolete) A remedy which restores the natural order of the inverted irritative motions in the animal system[1]
- (by extension) Any remedy that restores something to its desired natural state.
- 1848, Thomas Hall, Rowland Bradshaw, page 295:
- Dear Rowland, it must be your business and mine to experimentalize on the utility and practicability of a revertent to this disgusting disorder which now vexes and threatens death to the state.
- A mutation that reverts or undoes the effects of another mutation.
- 1982, Advances in Genetics- Volume 21, page 360:
- A revertent having restored levels of ornithine decarboxylase has been reported () and is probably a second site revertent which compensates for ts4.
- 1999, Progress in Nucleic Acid Research and Molecular Biology, page 44:
- In all cases where the original inactivating mutation disrupted a base pair in the putative secondary structure of the site, in the revertent, the opposing nucleotide in the base pair mutated to restore pairing.
References
[edit]- ^ “revertent”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.
French
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Verb
[edit]revertent
Latin
[edit]Verb
[edit]revertent
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