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Lab: size of the atom
Lab: size of the atom

... Galvanized iron is produced by coating iron with a thin layer of metallic zinc. The zinc coating protects the underlying iron metal against rusting or corrosion. Zinc is more reactive than iron and thus reacts with oxygen in the air and with water before the iron'does. In this way, the zinc coating ...
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... A human autosomal recessive lethal genetic disease whose defective allele has been maintained at a relatively high level in certain population groups because it gives the heterozygote resistance to an infectious disease is: a. ...
Anthraquinone Photonuclease Structure Determines Its Mode of
Anthraquinone Photonuclease Structure Determines Its Mode of

... a phosphorescence emission characteristic of an nπ* excited state is detected from a frozen ethylene glycol-PBS solution at 77 K.17 When bound to [poly(dA)/poly(dT)] or duplex poly[(dGdC)], the phosphorescence of AQI is shifted 7 nm to higher energy and its intensity is reduced 24% and 62%, respecti ...
Chem 317 Exam II
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BIO | DNA Review Worksheet | KEY

... There would be no change to the protein because TAA AUU would still code for Isoleucine, therefore it would be a silent mutation. ...
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7.014 Problem Set 3 Solutions
7.014 Problem Set 3 Solutions

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... Number the following steps from start (1) to finish (5) of genetically modifying an organism. _____ Ligase (tape) glues DNA together. _____ The restriction enzyme (scissors) cuts DNA apart at known sequences. _____ The desired trait is moved into its new germplasm. _____ A desired germplasm and a de ...
Genome Editing of a CArG Element in the Mouse Genome
Genome Editing of a CArG Element in the Mouse Genome

... effective but crude. In contrast, Han et al1 were able to carry out their study in just a few months while creating a more subtle mutant allele in which several nucleotides were substituted to impair the CArG element, with no need for antibiotic resistance, the Cre-loxP system, and so on. The tremen ...
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... _____“Non-coding DNA does not code for important proteins. Your coding genes code for important proteins that are necessary for survival. Coding genes do not have much variability in the nucleotide sequences from person to person because mutations would create non-functioning proteins and the person ...
DNA - Cloudfront.net
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... • Genes are made of DNA = deoxyribonucleic acid • How could DNA code for everything genes do? – Genes had to carry information from one generation to the next – Genes had to put that information to work by determining the inheritable characteristics of organisms – Genes had to be easily copied, beca ...
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Molecular Bio Questions1

... 2. Describe how the name of a gene and its gene product are denoted. 3. Describe the similarities and differences between DNA and RNA. 4. It takes 40 minutes for E. coli chromosome replication but only 20 minutes for cell division. How is this possible? 5. Why is replication of the lagging DNA stra ...
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Questions 4

... 2. Describe how the name of a gene and its gene product are denoted. 3. Describe the similarities and differences between DNA and RNA. 4. It takes 40 minutes for E. coli chromosome replication but only 20 minutes for cell division. How is this possible? 5. Why is replication of the lagging DNA stra ...
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Zinc finger nuclease

Zinc-finger nucleases (ZFNs) are artificial restriction enzymes generated by fusing a zinc finger DNA-binding domain to a DNA-cleavage domain. Zinc finger domains can be engineered to target specific desired DNA sequences and this enables zinc-finger nucleases to target unique sequences within complex genomes. By taking advantage of endogenous DNA repair machinery, these reagents can be used to precisely alter the genomes of higher organisms.
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