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Slide 1
Slide 1

DATA ENCRYPTION USING BIO MOLECULAR INFORMATION
DATA ENCRYPTION USING BIO MOLECULAR INFORMATION

... information storage, exceeding capability of conventional electronic media. A few grams of DNA may hold all data stored in the digital mediums in the world.[4] The unique property of DNA encoding is used for computations, improve the security and encryption and to mitigate the flaws of the current s ...
DNA-dependent DNA polymerase (DDDP)
DNA-dependent DNA polymerase (DDDP)

Chapter 1
Chapter 1

Chapter 4
Chapter 4

Simultanous isolation of RNA and DNA from one FFPE
Simultanous isolation of RNA and DNA from one FFPE

... Since FFPE samples contain DNA molecules that are crosslinked to each other, as well as to RNA and protein molecules, breakage of these crosslinks is necessary in order to release DNA for subsequent purification. After differential solubilization, RNA is removed with the supernatant and DNA remains ...
UNIT SIX: MOLECULAR GENETICS AND BIOTECHNOLOGY
UNIT SIX: MOLECULAR GENETICS AND BIOTECHNOLOGY

... C. Four scientists joined the search for the DNA structure: Franklin, Wilkins, Crick and Watson 1. Rosalind Franklind’s Photo and x-ray diffraction data helped Watson and Crick solve the structure of DNA. The photo indicated that DNA was a double helix a twisted ladder shape 2. Watson and Crick prop ...
Teacher Guide
Teacher Guide

Enzymes used in Genetic Engineering The ability to manipulate
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... Haemophilus influenzae becomes Hin; Diplocococcus pneumoniae Dpn and so on. Then comes a letter that identifies the strain of bacteria; Eco R for strain R. Finally there is a roman numeral for the particular enzyme if there are more than one in the strain in question; Eco RI for the first enzyme fro ...
Applicability and sensitivity of PCR SSCP method for milk species
Applicability and sensitivity of PCR SSCP method for milk species

... et al., 2008; ABDEL-RAHMAN & AHMED, 2007). In recent decades many analytical and molecular biological techniques were developed by researchers worldwide, simultaneously with spread of foodstuffs adulterations (MAYER, 2005). Beside protein methods and fatty acid composition analysis, a number of DNA ...
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Forever 100bp Ladder Personalizer

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... Genomic libraries are screened by hybridization (see Topic I2) with a DNA probe that is complementary to part of the nucleotide sequence of the desired gene. The probe may be a DNA restriction fragment or perhaps part of a cDNA clone. Another approach is possible if some of the protein sequence for ...
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... Plasmid DNA is useful in a wide range of molecular biology applications. However, purification of plasmid DNA from pelleted bacterial culture can be time-consuming when done manually. Automation of this process can deliver significant increases in throughput as well as higher levels of precision and ...
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Screening for Recombinants

... The insert may have been a substrate for recombination by recombinases in the most bacterium (remember most common laboratory strains are rec A minus, but there are other recombinases present). You can transform the plasmid into an E. coli strain deficient in more recombinases than just the recA. So ...
DNA Replication Lecture PowerPoint
DNA Replication Lecture PowerPoint

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Maurice Wilkins



Maurice Hugh Frederick Wilkins CBE FRS (15 December 1916 – 5 October 2004) was a New Zealand-born English physicist and molecular biologist, and Nobel Laureate whose research contributed to the scientific understanding of phosphorescence, isotope separation, optical microscopy and X-ray diffraction, and to the development of radar. He is best known for his work at King's College, London on the structure of DNA which falls into three distinct phases. The first was in 1948–50 where his initial studies produced the first clear X-ray images of DNA which he presented at a conference in Naples in 1951 attended by James Watson. During the second phase of work (1951–52) he produced clear ""B form"" ""X"" shaped images from squid sperm which he sent to James Watson and Francis Crick causing Watson to write ""Wilkins... has obtained extremely excellent X-ray diffraction photographs""[of DNA]. Throughout this period Wilkins was consistent in his belief that DNA was helical even when Rosalind Franklin expressed strong views to the contrary.In 1953 Franklin instructed Raymond Gosling to give Wilkins, without condition, a high quality image of ""B"" form DNA which she had unexpectedly produced months earlier but had “put it aside” to concentrate on other work. Wilkins, having checked that he was free to personally use the photograph to confirm his earlier results, showed it to Watson without the consent of Rosalind Franklin. This image, along with the knowledge that Linus Pauling had published an incorrect structure of DNA, “mobilised” Watson to restart model building efforts with Crick. Important contributions and data from Wilkins, Franklin (obtained via Max Perutz) and colleagues in Cambridge enabled Watson and Crick to propose a double-helix model for DNA. The third and longest phase of Wilkins' work on DNA took place from 1953 onwards. Here Wilkins led a major project at King's College, London, to test, verify and make significant corrections to the DNA model proposed by Watson and Crick and to study the structure of RNA. Wilkins, Crick and Watson were awarded the 1962 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine, ""for their discoveries concerning the molecular structure of nucleic acids and its significance for information transfer in living material.""
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