Zebrafish - yourgenome
... What is a model organism? • Non-human species widely studied to understand human disease. • Model organisms are used when experimentation using humans is unfeasible or ...
... What is a model organism? • Non-human species widely studied to understand human disease. • Model organisms are used when experimentation using humans is unfeasible or ...
Molecular and Genomics-Based Diagnostics for Medical Microbiology
... A facilitated and rapid access of clinical microbiology laboratories to sequencing platforms A need for standardized and fully automated sequence interpretation that would ideally be independent of both the sequencing platform and the exact species of microorganism The ability to translate the data ...
... A facilitated and rapid access of clinical microbiology laboratories to sequencing platforms A need for standardized and fully automated sequence interpretation that would ideally be independent of both the sequencing platform and the exact species of microorganism The ability to translate the data ...
Gene Trees, Populations and the Microbial Species Concept
... • Allows for exchange of auxiliary genes • Predicts that core genes will show higher levels of recombination within a species than between species • Predicts that core genes will diverge more rapidly than auxiliary genes between species ...
... • Allows for exchange of auxiliary genes • Predicts that core genes will show higher levels of recombination within a species than between species • Predicts that core genes will diverge more rapidly than auxiliary genes between species ...
supplementary materials
... replacement using CgURA3 PCR product [3]. Insertion was tested by PCR. GFP-TRP1 was inserted into the SPO77 locus of yEJ129 by one-step recombination using GFP and TRP1 amplified by PCR from plasmid pFA6a-GFP(S65T)-TRP1 to make strain yEJ152 and tested by PCR [4]. All in vivo gene and element replac ...
... replacement using CgURA3 PCR product [3]. Insertion was tested by PCR. GFP-TRP1 was inserted into the SPO77 locus of yEJ129 by one-step recombination using GFP and TRP1 amplified by PCR from plasmid pFA6a-GFP(S65T)-TRP1 to make strain yEJ152 and tested by PCR [4]. All in vivo gene and element replac ...
Milestone1
... Proteins are linear chains of amino acid residues that fold into complex 3D structures that carry out cellular functions. Proteins that have similar linear sequences of amino acid residues often fold into similar 3D shapes and have similar functions. In lecture, we discussed the term “homology” in t ...
... Proteins are linear chains of amino acid residues that fold into complex 3D structures that carry out cellular functions. Proteins that have similar linear sequences of amino acid residues often fold into similar 3D shapes and have similar functions. In lecture, we discussed the term “homology” in t ...
T - Flushing Community Schools
... = the process by which the number of chromosomes is reduced by half to form sex cells (eggs and sperm) n See ...
... = the process by which the number of chromosomes is reduced by half to form sex cells (eggs and sperm) n See ...
Linköping University Post Print β-tubulin mutations in ovarian cancer using
... Ovarian cancer is a common malignancy in women and chemotherapy plays an important role in the treatment following the initial surgery. A major clinical advance was made in the early 1990s when paclitaxel (Taxol ) in combination with a platinum derivative was introduced in the treatment of ovarian c ...
... Ovarian cancer is a common malignancy in women and chemotherapy plays an important role in the treatment following the initial surgery. A major clinical advance was made in the early 1990s when paclitaxel (Taxol ) in combination with a platinum derivative was introduced in the treatment of ovarian c ...
BIOL 112 – Principles of Zoology
... 6. Double strand break repair Repairs DSBs by reannealing the two DNA segments - protein aligns the broken ends of DNA for rejoining Recombination repair mechanism ...
... 6. Double strand break repair Repairs DSBs by reannealing the two DNA segments - protein aligns the broken ends of DNA for rejoining Recombination repair mechanism ...
chapter 20
... This creates a diverse pool of bacteria: some bacteria that have taken up the desired recombinant plasmid DNA, and other bacteria that have taken up other DNA, both recombinant and nonrecombinant. 5. The transformed bacteria are plated on a solid nutrient medium containing ampicillin and a molecular ...
... This creates a diverse pool of bacteria: some bacteria that have taken up the desired recombinant plasmid DNA, and other bacteria that have taken up other DNA, both recombinant and nonrecombinant. 5. The transformed bacteria are plated on a solid nutrient medium containing ampicillin and a molecular ...
class syllabus
... hearing, and she decides to mate her dog to Lukas’ dog. Among the resulting litter of 8 puppies (litter 1), four have normal hearing, and four are deaf. Sophie chooses two of the puppies with normal hearing from litter 1, allows them to grow up, and then mates them to one another to produce a litter ...
... hearing, and she decides to mate her dog to Lukas’ dog. Among the resulting litter of 8 puppies (litter 1), four have normal hearing, and four are deaf. Sophie chooses two of the puppies with normal hearing from litter 1, allows them to grow up, and then mates them to one another to produce a litter ...
human gene testing - National Academy of Sciences
... with the aid of another type of enzyme, called ligase. By 1973, researchers were using restriction enzymes to cut specific DNA sequences of interest and join them to the DNA of bacteria. The bacteria then generated copies of the selected DNA with their own DNA each time they divided. Because a singl ...
... with the aid of another type of enzyme, called ligase. By 1973, researchers were using restriction enzymes to cut specific DNA sequences of interest and join them to the DNA of bacteria. The bacteria then generated copies of the selected DNA with their own DNA each time they divided. Because a singl ...
Microbial Genetics Lab
... covered by high-density probes. These allow the identification of transcription start sites and operons and thus regions important in gene regulation. In this experiment we would isolate RNAs from a control cyanobacterium and a mutant cyanobacterium, e.g. one with a defect in photosynthetic electron ...
... covered by high-density probes. These allow the identification of transcription start sites and operons and thus regions important in gene regulation. In this experiment we would isolate RNAs from a control cyanobacterium and a mutant cyanobacterium, e.g. one with a defect in photosynthetic electron ...
1989 Allen Award Address: The American Society of Human Genetics Annual Meeting, Baltimore.
... You have done Ray White and me a great honor in selecting us for the Allen Award this year, and I want first of all to express my appreciation of it. Even though I received my Ph.D. from the Human Genetics Department at the University of Michigan, I never imagined that I would contribute directly to ...
... You have done Ray White and me a great honor in selecting us for the Allen Award this year, and I want first of all to express my appreciation of it. Even though I received my Ph.D. from the Human Genetics Department at the University of Michigan, I never imagined that I would contribute directly to ...
designer genes * southern poly regional 2006
... If the rate of transcription is 50 bases/sec, approximately how long will it take the cell to make the RNA for dystrophin? A. ...
... If the rate of transcription is 50 bases/sec, approximately how long will it take the cell to make the RNA for dystrophin? A. ...
Gene testing - Margie Patlak
... with the aid of another type of enzyme, called ligase. By 1973, researchers were using restriction enzymes to cut specific DNA sequences of interest and join them to the DNA of bacteria. The bacteria then generated copies of the selected DNA with their own DNA each time they divided. Because a singl ...
... with the aid of another type of enzyme, called ligase. By 1973, researchers were using restriction enzymes to cut specific DNA sequences of interest and join them to the DNA of bacteria. The bacteria then generated copies of the selected DNA with their own DNA each time they divided. Because a singl ...
Linkage, Recombination, and Crossing Over
... bp amplified region there must be a DNA sequence difference (polymorphism) between individuals. • The most common DNA marker systems examine the number of repeated units in a simple sequence repeat motif, such as CACACACACACACAC. • Individuals can vary considerably in the number of CA blocks, making ...
... bp amplified region there must be a DNA sequence difference (polymorphism) between individuals. • The most common DNA marker systems examine the number of repeated units in a simple sequence repeat motif, such as CACACACACACACAC. • Individuals can vary considerably in the number of CA blocks, making ...
Next generation sequencing
... Depiction of a new type of highly miniaturized microarray that incorporates randomness in its design. Each array contains ~50,000 beads carrying oligonucleotide probes. The beads are lodged in wells on the surface of a hexagonally packed optical fiber bundle. The location and identity of the random ...
... Depiction of a new type of highly miniaturized microarray that incorporates randomness in its design. Each array contains ~50,000 beads carrying oligonucleotide probes. The beads are lodged in wells on the surface of a hexagonally packed optical fiber bundle. The location and identity of the random ...
Dharmacon Solutions for Studying Gene Function
... Analyzer 2200, IN Cell Analyzer 6000 or Cytell™ Cell Imaging System. These cutting-edge quantitative imaging technologies give you incredible depth and breadth of investigation, allowing you to analyze interactions as they happen and gain deeper insights into complex cellular mechanisms. The high-th ...
... Analyzer 2200, IN Cell Analyzer 6000 or Cytell™ Cell Imaging System. These cutting-edge quantitative imaging technologies give you incredible depth and breadth of investigation, allowing you to analyze interactions as they happen and gain deeper insights into complex cellular mechanisms. The high-th ...
Final project
... parameters but with a requirement of getting at least 2000bp PCR product. a. How many primer pairs did you find, and what is the length of the product for each pair? b. Translate this gene into a protein and run it against the PFAM database. List the protein domains you found from the PFAM search? Q ...
... parameters but with a requirement of getting at least 2000bp PCR product. a. How many primer pairs did you find, and what is the length of the product for each pair? b. Translate this gene into a protein and run it against the PFAM database. List the protein domains you found from the PFAM search? Q ...
File
... Each triplet codes for one amino acid / single amino acid may have up to 6 different triplets for it due to the redundancy of the code / code is degenerate. Some amino acids are coded by more than one codon Same triplet code will give the same amino acid in virtually all organisms, universal code We ...
... Each triplet codes for one amino acid / single amino acid may have up to 6 different triplets for it due to the redundancy of the code / code is degenerate. Some amino acids are coded by more than one codon Same triplet code will give the same amino acid in virtually all organisms, universal code We ...
Chapter 13 DNA - Pearson Places
... Because nitrogen base pairing ensures that the opposite polymer strand is produced from each half of the double helix Q13. How are DNA databases useful for forensic analysis? A13. To eliminate individual from suspicion; to identify the culprit of a crime, to identify victims of a natural disaster or ...
... Because nitrogen base pairing ensures that the opposite polymer strand is produced from each half of the double helix Q13. How are DNA databases useful for forensic analysis? A13. To eliminate individual from suspicion; to identify the culprit of a crime, to identify victims of a natural disaster or ...
Human Genetic Engineering
... transfer the normal gene into only those tissues most affected by the disease. For instance, bronchial infections are the major cause of early death for patients with cystic fibrosis (CF). The lungs of CF patients produce thick mucus that provides a great growth medium for bacteria and viruses. If t ...
... transfer the normal gene into only those tissues most affected by the disease. For instance, bronchial infections are the major cause of early death for patients with cystic fibrosis (CF). The lungs of CF patients produce thick mucus that provides a great growth medium for bacteria and viruses. If t ...