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Probabilistic Segmentation - Department of Zoology, UBC
Probabilistic Segmentation - Department of Zoology, UBC

... either the coding or the noncoding DNA strand. Among the 404 motifs, there were 35 pairs of inverse complements (versus fewer than two pairs expected by chance, p < 10−20). • In addition, 71 of these 404 long words fell into families of related sequences that differed at only one nucleotide or that ...
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Document

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... adjacent to the Air promoter is methylated (asterisk). Genes not subject to imprinting are shown as blue boxes. (b,c) The paternal allele. (b) In a one-step model, Air RNA (red line) associates with repressor proteins (purple ovals) to form silencing complexes that associate with sequences within or ...
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transcript - Mike Dyall

... polymerase to bind and to initiate transcription. 2.START POINT: First base pair transcribed into RNA 3. UPSTREAM: sequence before the start point 4. DOWNSTREAM: sequence after the start point. 5. TERMINATOR: a DNA sequence that causes RNA pol to terminate transcription ...
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2015 Midterm Study Guide

... Inducer Operon - For metabolic pathways that are normally turned “off” Ex: Lac Operon Repressor Operons - For metabolic pathways that are normally turned “on” Ex: Trp Operon Significance of using operons - Why have bacteria that have operons continue to remain in existence What genes are always turn ...
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Promoter (genetics)



In genetics, a promoter is a region of DNA that initiates transcription of a particular gene. Promoters are located near the transcription start sites of genes, on the same strand and upstream on the DNA (towards the 5' region of the sense strand).Promoters can be about 100–1000 base pairs long.
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