Molecule in a sentence as a noun

That's great, but one problem: molecules don't stay molecules over two thousand years.

[1] To be exact, cells have an "alarm" signal molecule floating inside them.

Iteration / core choice: You start with a small organic molecule "core" that can be the backbone of your drug.

This is when you lock down the IP, not just by patenting that molecule, but all other molecules that are similar.

The idea is to find a molecule with a core that will fit, and active groups that will make the drug 'plug' the active site of the protein.

[...] In the long-term, the policy proposes to reduce the bandwidth of prices of the same molecule and this will have an impact on manufacturers in the mid and lower segments, analysts feel.

In small molecules, this is typically a protein that you want to activate somehow to change a biological pathway.

Well, it turns out fat can get stored without insulin at all, with the help of a little molecule called acylation stimulation protein [3].Nutrition is harder than it seems.

We used a combination of tracking concentrations and individual molecules.

While each molecule has wildly different properties, these properties have almost no impact on the percentage of people who will go on to abuse and/or become addicted to the drug.

The issue that the Indian court had with Gleevec patent application is that it only rearranged the molecule in a new crystal pattern, ie Polymorphism.

Lots of time looking at pivot tables of raw experiment data, 2d molecule structures, 3d structures, computational predictive results, etc.

They can find an exploit in Steve's cancer genome on Wednesday, design a molecule to hack it on Thursday, synthesize it on Friday and start titrating it into the patient on Saturday.

For specific macromolecules like DNA polymerase, RNA polymerase, ribosomes, etc we kept track of the position of each individual molecule.

You can choose to feel insulted regardless, like you could choose to feel insulted if a teacher said "Nope, there is in fact no carbon in a water molecule -- here's some resources or talk to a chemist and they'll set you straight", but that is entirely under your control.

> We can't forecast the weather two weeks out yet we claim to be able to do it 30 years out?We can't forecast the position of a molecule of gas in a balloon more than a tiny fraction of a second out, but that doesn't mean you can't predict that the temperature of that gas will increase when you compress the balloon.

If a novel molecule is synthesized -- the chemical and pharmaceutical industries keep a record, I gather, of all molecules whose structures have been worked out, so it's possible to know when a new one appears -- and then proves useful for some medical purpose, it's pretty clear that a contribution has been made, and what that contribution consists of.

Molecule definitions

noun

(physics and chemistry) the simplest structural unit of an element or compound

noun

(nontechnical usage) a tiny piece of anything

See also: atom particle corpuscle mote speck