CORD-19:01548ef6d46d6e6d72afe8cbf4e231552b9d2bd7 / 16058-16345 JSONTXT

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    CORD-19_Custom_license_subset

    {"project":"CORD-19_Custom_license_subset","denotations":[{"id":"T85","span":{"begin":0,"end":287},"obj":"Sentence"}],"text":"Tissues from other species, such as the Chinese hamster (Yerganian and Leonard, 1961; Hsu et al., 1964) , also readily give cell lines that can be continuously propagated in vitro, although here the cells tend to become pseudodiploid rather than heteroploid when continuously maintained."}

    CORD-19-Sentences

    {"project":"CORD-19-Sentences","denotations":[{"id":"TextSentencer_T85","span":{"begin":0,"end":287},"obj":"Sentence"},{"id":"TextSentencer_T85","span":{"begin":0,"end":287},"obj":"Sentence"}],"namespaces":[{"prefix":"_base","uri":"http://pubannotation.org/ontology/tao.owl#"}],"text":"Tissues from other species, such as the Chinese hamster (Yerganian and Leonard, 1961; Hsu et al., 1964) , also readily give cell lines that can be continuously propagated in vitro, although here the cells tend to become pseudodiploid rather than heteroploid when continuously maintained."}

    Epistemic_Statements

    {"project":"Epistemic_Statements","denotations":[{"id":"T49","span":{"begin":0,"end":287},"obj":"Epistemic_statement"}],"text":"Tissues from other species, such as the Chinese hamster (Yerganian and Leonard, 1961; Hsu et al., 1964) , also readily give cell lines that can be continuously propagated in vitro, although here the cells tend to become pseudodiploid rather than heteroploid when continuously maintained."}