Isozyme abundance has also been shown to be tissue specific.
This is the process by which T cells are attracted to specific tissue and organ targets.
Here cells increase in size, but are not differentiated into specific tissues.
Only a minority of the clusters contained genes that were restricted to specific tissues.
If those obstacles are overcome, researchers must still learn how to direct the growth of the cells to produce specific tissues.
These conditions tend to be associated with autoantibodies to antigens which are not tissue specific.
Each layer gives rise to specific tissues and organs in the developing embryo.
Conditions, for example, can be a specific time during development in the life of the organism or limited to a specific tissue.
The specificity of a particular virus for a specific tissue is known as its tropism.
Instead, it more likely plays a role in the function of specific tissues.