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Microbial Genetics Lecture PowerPoint
Microbial Genetics Lecture PowerPoint

... • Images used on this resource, and on the SPO website are, wherever possible, credited and linked to their source. Any words underlined and appearing in blue are links that can be clicked on for more information. PowerPoints must be viewed in slide show mode to use the hyperlinks directly. • Severa ...
Article - Nature
Article - Nature

... syntheses in vivo. Only NspN2 and PcsB6 had also been characterized in vitro. In contrast, ORF5,8 SioC, ORF1,9 SfaP, TcsG, FdmV,10 SanV,11 and LlpA12 had not yet been fully characterized. Their involvement in secondary metabolism has been suggested because they are encoded in biosynthetic gene clust ...
File
File

Overheads - Zoology, UBC
Overheads - Zoology, UBC

... As a retrovirus, the virus particle (called a virion) contains RNA not DNA. When a retrovirus infects a host cell (1), the RNA becomes translated into DNA (2-3) by a protein called "reverse transcriptase" that is encoded in the viral RNA. This DNA then enters the nucleus and integrates into the host ...
Taxonomic distribution of Large DNA viruses in the sea
Taxonomic distribution of Large DNA viruses in the sea

...  Comparison of the abundance of viral PolB genes with the bacterial ones  Geographic distributions of viral PolBs  Examination of additional ORFs ...
Abstract
Abstract

... through single base excision repair and gap filling. It is a specialized type of polymerase, encoded by a gene that if is over-expressed, under-expressed or alternatively spliced, a tumour genesis chain may be provoked as well as tolerance to DNA damaging agents, such as geno-toxic chemotherapy, UV ...
emboj7601486-sup
emboj7601486-sup

... fusion can proceed without supplementing exogenous GTP. Because GTPase function is required for in vitro fusion, the fact that fusion occurs even when exogenous GTP has not been not added, suggests that a sufficient number of the GTPases that co-purify with vacuoles are GTP-bound. ...
BDOL Interactive Chalkboard
BDOL Interactive Chalkboard

... The structure of nucleotides • Nucleotides join together to form long chains, with the phosphate group of one nucleotide bonding to the deoxyribose sugar of an adjacent nucleotide. • The phosphate groups and deoxyribose molecules form the backbone of the chain, and the nitrogenous bases stick out l ...
PROPOSITION DE SUJET DE STAGE / THESE Optical
PROPOSITION DE SUJET DE STAGE / THESE Optical

... Assembly is far more efficient in vivo than in vitro, presumably due to a series of non-ribosomal factors that transiently interact with the nascent ribosome and assist its assembly. In particular, in E. coli, three DEAD-box helicases participate in the assembly of the 50S subunit. One of them, call ...
Lecture 13
Lecture 13

... with helium gas under pressure. Other methods, such as microinjection, sonication, and electroporation cause transient microwounds in the cell wall and the plasma membrane, allowing the DNA in the medium to enter the cytoplasm before repair or fusion of the damaged cellular structures. However, many ...
end of semester main examination
end of semester main examination

... On the basis of the information given, is this DNA from a bacterium or from a eukaryotic organism? Explain your answer. [3 Marks] ...
The Replication of DNA
The Replication of DNA

dna
dna

Mutations in genes
Mutations in genes

... In genetics, the mutation rate is a measure of the rate at which various types of mutations occur over time. Mutation rates are typically given for a specific class of mutation, for instance point mutations, small or large scale insertions or deletions. ...
Horizontal transfer of genes in bacteria Paul H. Roy
Horizontal transfer of genes in bacteria Paul H. Roy

... Tn21 there is an integron encoding streptomycin and sulphonamide resistance. While the aforementioned are typically extrachromosomal genes, plasmids can also carry chromosomal genes. A good example is the class C chromosomal β-lactamases, whose genes are increasingly found on plasmids. As mentioned ...
Lecture 27
Lecture 27

Document
Document

... Where DNA replication and transcription occurs. ...
Rossetti C BrucRes Conf 07 v2 LGA
Rossetti C BrucRes Conf 07 v2 LGA

... In Vivo intracellular profile of B. melitensis expression • B. melitensis had a common in vivo transcriptional profile in the first 4 h PI • 618 genes (19.3 % of B. melitensis genome) were identified as differentially expressed in at least 4 of 5 time points evaluated • Most of the functional categ ...
Ch. 9: Presentation Slides
Ch. 9: Presentation Slides

... • Typically, a genomic sequence contains many gaps that prevent the contigs from being assembled. • BAC clones are important because the sequences at the extreme ends of the cloned fragments give long-range information that allows adjacent contigs to be recognized and assembled in the correct orient ...
Lutz Heide, Pharmaceutical Institute, Tübingen University
Lutz Heide, Pharmaceutical Institute, Tübingen University

... to exist only in eukaryotes. Period of controversy: Serine, threonine and tyrosine phosphorylation is the most common type of phosphorylation in eukaryotes, on contrary, in bacteria phosphorylation occurs predominantly on histidine and aspartate (two-component system). Until the early 1990s it was l ...
MOLECULAR GENETICS You Are Here* Genes --
MOLECULAR GENETICS You Are Here* Genes --

... 3. transformation* - absorption of 'foreign' DNA by recipient cells 4. BACTERIAL CONJUGATION* - involves DNA plasmidsg* (F+ & R = resistance) conjugation is primitive sex-like reproduction in bacteria [Hfr*] 5. VIRAL TRANSDUCTION - via a viral vector ( lysogeny & TRANSDUCTION* ) general transduction ...
Protein Synthesis - VCC Library
Protein Synthesis - VCC Library

... defense, transport, and storage among other things. The types of protein produced within a cell depend on the information stored in the cell’s DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid). In eukaryotic cells, DNA is housed in the nucleus. Because DNA cannot leave the nucleus, the information stored in the nucleotid ...
Full-Text PDF
Full-Text PDF

... localization signal. It contains two conserved helical regions, one located in the central region (residues 75–95) and one in the C-terminus (residues 143–193), separated from each other and from the N-terminus by regions predicted to be intrinsically disordered. Neither of the conserved helical reg ...
RNA and Protein Synthesis
RNA and Protein Synthesis

Biology First Six Weeks Vocabulary
Biology First Six Weeks Vocabulary

... A segment of DNA nucleotides that code for a specific protein to be produced and leads to the expression of a hereditary trait or characteristic A purine base that pairs with cytosine Type of bond found between the nitrogen bases of the DNA molecule A nitrogen containing molecule with basic properti ...
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Silencer (genetics)

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