germ line

noun

variants or germline
: the cellular lineage of a sexually-reproducing organism from which eggs and sperm are derived
also : the genetic material contained in this cellular lineage which can be passed to the next generation

Examples of germ line in a Sentence

Recent Examples on the Web
Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Both techniques irrevocably alter the germ line, meaning that any changes are passed down to future generations. Elizabeth Katkin, Discover Magazine, 17 Jan. 2020 For scientists interested in tinkering with the human germ line, there are three places to introduce edits—in a woman’s egg cells, in a man’s sperm cells, or in the earliest stages of an embryo, when all the genes are housed in stem cells, and tissues have not yet begun to specialize. Stephen S. Hall, Wired, 11 Mar. 2021 The only way to avoid this recurrent injection of deleterious alleles into the germ line and mutational abnormality is to engage in some proactive intervention during meiosis, or sift through the gametes prior to in vitro fertilization. Razib Khan, Discover Magazine, 12 Sep. 2013 The germ line, produced by egg and sperm, is the only part of us that naturally survives us in our offspring. George Church, Discover Magazine, 16 Oct. 2012 This suggested that the butterflies' germ line---the cells that turn into egg and sperm---had suffered damage, so mutations could be expected to continue to accumulate down through the generations. Veronique Greenwood, Discover Magazine, 15 Aug. 2012 An international summit on genome editing in 2015 resulted in a report laying out some of the conditions under which editing the human germ line for clinical purposes might one day be allowable. Tanya Lewis, Scientific American, 15 Aug. 2019 The survivors made it into the germ line, so the within-lifetime innovations were passed on to subsequent flowers and pollen. Elizabeth Pennisi, Science | AAAS, 29 Aug. 2019 Researchers have found KoRV DNA in koala sperm, confirming that the virus has indeed taken root in the germ line. Quanta Magazine, 4 Mar. 2015

Word History

First Known Use

1916, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler
The first known use of germ line was in 1916

Dictionary Entries Near germ line

Cite this Entry

“Germ line.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/germ%20line. Accessed 24 Nov. 2024.

Medical Definition

germ line

noun
variants or germline
: the cellular lineage especially of a sexually reproducing organism from which eggs and sperm are derived and in which a cell undergoing mutation can be passed to the next generation
… the difference between gene therapy of somatic cells and modification of the germ lineDavid Baltimore
also : the genetic material contained in this cellular lineage which can be passed to the next generation
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