0 present participle of secrete
1 (of animals or plants or their cells) to produce and release a liquid:
2 to put something in a place where it is unlikely to be found:
Elucidation of these secreting factors in co-culture merits further investigation.
As growth of preantral follicles varied in different co-culture systems, the secreting profiles of follicles/somatic cells in culture would also be different.
Currents through during transmitter discharge from the neuromuscular the fusion pore that forms during exocytosis of a secreting junction.
Secreting a dwelling tube is a common phenomenon among phoronid, pogonophoran and annelid worms.
Apparently the larva is capable of secreting a slightly viscid fluid, for in glass tubes they often adhere to the sides.
Such competition is mediated through host rejection responses to tick infestation to which ticks respond by secreting immunodulatory saliva.
In addition to secreting molecules ependymal cells might influence neurogenesis through other mechanisms.
This staining pattern suggested that adhesion molecules were produced by oesophageal glands, and that adult worms kept secreting adhesion molecules in vivo.