What's the difference between malice and nonmalignant?

Malice


Definition:

  • (n.) Enmity of heart; malevolence; ill will; a spirit delighting in harm or misfortune to another; a disposition to injure another; a malignant design of evil.
  • (n.) Any wicked or mischievous intention of the mind; a depraved inclination to mischief; an intention to vex, annoy, or injure another person, or to do a wrongful act without just cause or cause or excuse; a wanton disregard of the rights or safety of others; willfulness.
  • (v. t.) To regard with extreme ill will.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) After addition of triiodothyronine, malic enzyme mRNA accumulated with sigmoidal kinetics, approaching a new steady state at 36-48 h after adding hormone.
  • (2) In addition to detecting three major antigenic variants of malic enzyme within this group, both antisera readily reacted with Streptococcus faecalis malic enzyme.
  • (3) The oxidative enzymes of the pentose phosphate pathway, ATP-citrate lyase, 'malic' enzyme and fatty acid synthetase also decrease markedly.
  • (4) Hormone therapy also caused an increase in the rate of incorporation of [3H]leucine into soluble proteins and in malic enzyme activity.
  • (5) Moreover, the transcriptional rate, mRNA concentration and induction of malic enzyme were increased by triiodothyronine treatment at a similar rate in both the young and old rats, but the absolute increments were lower in the old animals.
  • (6) The TRH treatment suppressed mitochondrial cytochrome c reductase and glucose-6-phosphatase activities, whereas cyclo(His-Pro) reduced cytochrome c reductase and malic enzyme activities.
  • (7) Activities of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and malic dehydrogenase of the mycelial form were higher than those of the yeast form.
  • (8) These observations suggest that in the rat neostriatum there are some neurons especially able to catabolize pyruvate via cytosolic malic isoenzyme.
  • (9) Thus a long-lived event in thyroid hormone stimulation of malic enzyme synthesis occurred prior to transcription of a specific messenger RNA (mRNA), presumably malic enzyme mRNA.
  • (10) In the Ob 17 preadipocyte cell line, during adipose differentiation, T3 amplified the progressive expression of two enzymes of the lipogenic pathway, ATP-citrate lyase (ATP-CL) and malic enzyme (ME) as previously described for fatty acid synthase (FAS) and fatty acid synthesis, and in the same time-period of development.
  • (11) The nucleotide sequence of the mRNA for malic enzyme ((S)-malate NADP+ oxidoreductase (oxaloacetate-decarboxylating, EC 1.1.1.40) from rat liver was determined from three overlapping cDNA clones.
  • (12) The specific nuclear binding of triiodothyronine (T3) (NBT3) and the activity of malic enzyme (ME), glucose-6-phosphate-dehydrogenase (G6PD), and 6-phosphogluconate-dehydrogenase (6PGD) were studied in the human fibroblast cell (MRC-5).
  • (13) 2-Hydroxyisobutyric acid, ethyl-2-hydroxybutyrate, malic acid, 1-butanol, benzyl alcohol and L-leucine did not act as substrates for the enzymes.
  • (14) Malic enzyme and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase were highly active in the adipose tissue of mammals but were inactive in the adipose tissue of birds.
  • (15) Distribution of kinase activity in centrifugal fractions of both liver and heart mitochondrial sonicates was parallel to that of the two inner membrane marker enzymes succinic dehydrogenase and cytochrome oxidase and quite different from that of the matrix enzyme malic dehydrogenase.
  • (16) Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase and malic enzyme are enzymes involved in NADPH synthesis.
  • (17) The antigenic enzymes, the precipitates of which are only stained by specific staining, are: aldolase, malic enzyme, acid phosphatase, peroxydase and cholinesterase.
  • (18) The coupling enzymes, fumarase (fumarate to L-malate) and malic enzyme (L-malate to pyruvate and NADPH), are adsorbed to nitrocellulose prior to blotting.
  • (19) The latter region apparently includes the malic dehydrogenase-1 gene.
  • (20) Some reactions, such as malic enzyme and glutamate dehydrogenase, may be inhibited or deleted with little or no adverse effect on the calculated cell growth rate.

Nonmalignant


Definition:

  • (a.) Not malignant, as a disease.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The protein was abundant in all t(14;18)-carrying cell lines and lymphomas and was also found at lower levels in pre-B-cell lines and nonmalignant lymphoid tissues that do not carry t(14;18) translocations.
  • (2) The total mortality was not found to be increased, and there were no increased incidences of lung cancer or death resulting from nonmalignant respiratory diseases.
  • (3) CA 125 concentrations were measured in 52 secretion specimens, in cytosol fractions of 97 tissue biopsies and in serum from 47 women with nonmalignant disorders and from 334 patients with carcinomas.
  • (4) We report a case in which papillary lesions developed in an ileal conduit that had been constructed for management of nonmalignant disease.
  • (5) With both US and Minnesota death rates, the SMRs for malignant neoplasms, cancer of the respiratory tract, cancer of the digestive system, heart disease, nonmalignant respiratory disease, and cirrhosis of the liver were all below 100.
  • (6) In the present study, in order to further understand the role of the insulin receptor in breast cancer, insulin receptor expression and function were characterized in three human breast cancer cell lines, MCF-7, ZR-75-1, and T-47D, and compared to a nonmalignant human breast epithelial cell line, 184B5.
  • (7) The possibility that Cl 1D cell line, an L-cell line derivative, was a mixture of malignant and nonmalignant cells was investigated because previous experiments showed that some hybrids derived from Cl 1D and tumor cell lines grew in vivo, whereas others apparently did not have that capacity.
  • (8) The cytocentrifuge provides a satisfactory method to distinguish malignant from nonmalignant CSF mononuclear elements in leukemic patients with pleocytosis.
  • (9) Electrophysiological findings in 10 patients with polyneuropathy and nonmalignant IgMk plasma cell dyscrasia are reported.
  • (10) This modified method has proven to have a low complication rate and to be both highly productive and reliable in the diagnosis of malignant and nonmalignant disease.
  • (11) PMRs underestimated nonmalignant respiratory disease by 16 percent but SMRs underestimated by 39 percent.
  • (12) We conclude that nonmalignant gastric ulcers treated medically should be followed by endoscopy at 6 and 12 weeks.
  • (13) However, improvement of the clinical specificity appears unlikely since each of these markers has a high false-positive rate in patients with other cancers, liver diseases, and nonmalignant diseases of the pancreas.
  • (14) Serum samples from patients with newly diagnosed, persistent, or recurrent malignancies of either known (n = 717) or unknown (n = 32) primary site, healthy blood donors (n = 309), and nonmalignant disease controls (n = 86) were studied using four highly specific and sensitive monoclonal based immunoradiometric assays to hCG and its free subunits.
  • (15) Angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy may evolve from a nonmalignant lymphoproliferation into a peripheral T-cell lymphoma or even into a high-grade B-cell lymphoma and thus offers the chance to observe cytogenetic changes during lymphoma development.
  • (16) The T-test and a discriminance analysis showed significant differences in nuclear shape between preparations with malignant urothelial cells and nonmalignant cells with reactive changes.
  • (17) These results are discussed and other reported examples of aneuploidy in nonmalignant tissues are reviewed.
  • (18) The number of TGF-alpha mRNAs containing eosinophils associated with malignant oral epithelium is significantly higher than that associated with nonmalignant oral epithelium.
  • (19) With the recent demonstration of circulating immune complexes in a variety of malignant and nonmalignant diseases, we have examined the sera of head and neck cancer patients for evidence of soluble immune compleses.
  • (20) Low-dose methotrexate sodium therapy used for nonmalignant disease has been associated with a variety of opportunistic infections with pathogens occurring in patients with defective cellular immunity.

Words possibly related to "nonmalignant"