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Evaluation of the contribution of individual gene
Evaluation of the contribution of individual gene

... cancer patients. The assay measures expression of 12 cancer and 5 reference genes that are combined to calculate a Genomic Prostate Score (GPS; scaled 0-100), providing a biologic measure of tumor aggressiveness. The cancer genes represent four biological pathways: androgen signaling, stromal respon ...
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Boolean models of gene regulatory networks
Boolean models of gene regulatory networks

... —  We’ll draw the state space for all four choices of the parameters: o  (Le, Ge) = (0, 0). We hope to end up in a fixed point (0,0,0). o  (Le, Ge) = (0, 1). We hope to end up in a fixed point (0,0,0). o  (Le, Ge) = (1, 0). We hope to end up in a fixed point (1,1,1). o  (Le, Ge) = (1, 1). We hope t ...
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Mechanism of Evolution Unit Organizer - Wiki
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The One Gene/One Enzyme Hypothesis
The One Gene/One Enzyme Hypothesis

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slides available - The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering
slides available - The National Academies of Sciences, Engineering

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Biology 4.35 Human Intervention

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gene expression - Aurora City Schools

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The Biotechnology Age: Issues and Impacts

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A systematic approach to reconstructing transcription networks in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.

... nference of intracellular regulatory networks is rapidly evolving into one of the major research topics in computational biology (1–5), which is not surprising, because virtually every biological process is constrained by these networks. Many diverse changes in the cellular environment are detected, ...
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Purified Mouse Anti-Human Retinoblastoma

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Big Idea 3: Living systems store, retrieve, transmit, and respond to
Big Idea 3: Living systems store, retrieve, transmit, and respond to

... (increase expression), while others are repressors (decrease expression). -The combination of transcription factors binding to the regulatory regions at any one time determines how much of the gene product will be produced. ...
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What is Ontology?
What is Ontology?

... • Most of these tools work in a similar way: – input a gene list and a subset of ‘interesting’ genes – tool shows which GO categories have most interesting genes associated with them i.e. which categories are ‘enriched’ for interesting genes – tool provides a statistical measure to determine whether ...
synthetic gene networks that count
synthetic gene networks that count

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... specific sequences or structures of the mRNA • Alternatively, translation of all mRNAs in a cell may be regulated simultaneously – For example, translation initiation factors are simultaneously activated in an egg following fertilization ...
Ch 18
Ch 18

... assistance of proteins called transcription factors (TFs) –  General TFs are essential for the transcription of all protein-coding genes –  In eukaryotes, high levels of transcription of particular genes depend on control elements interacting with specific TFs §  proximal control elementsare locate ...
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What is trans-acting factor?

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Transcription: Synthesizing RNA from DNA

... rRNA: structural component of ribosome, along with a protein it forms the ribosome which provides the construction site for polypeptide assembly snRNA: small nuclear RNA involved in modification of mRNA molecules The purpose of TRANSCRIPTION: produce a copy of a small section of DNA. Similar in euka ...
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Gene regulatory network



A gene regulatory network or genetic regulatory network (GRN) is a collection of regulators thatinteract with each other and with other substances in the cell to govern the gene expression levels of mRNA and proteins.The regulator can be DNA, RNA, protein and their complex. The interaction can be direct or indirect (through their transcribed RNA or translated protein).In general, each mRNA molecule goes on to make a specific protein (or set of proteins). In some cases this protein will be structural, and will accumulate at the cell membrane or within the cell to give it particular structural properties. In other cases the protein will be an enzyme, i.e., a micro-machine that catalyses a certain reaction, such as the breakdown of a food source or toxin. Some proteins though serve only to activate other genes, and these are the transcription factors that are the main players in regulatory networks or cascades. By binding to the promoter region at the start of other genes they turn them on, initiating the production of another protein, and so on. Some transcription factors are inhibitory.In single-celled organisms, regulatory networks respond to the external environment, optimising the cell at a given time for survival in this environment. Thus a yeast cell, finding itself in a sugar solution, will turn on genes to make enzymes that process the sugar to alcohol. This process, which we associate with wine-making, is how the yeast cell makes its living, gaining energy to multiply, which under normal circumstances would enhance its survival prospects.In multicellular animals the same principle has been put in the service of gene cascades that control body-shape. Each time a cell divides, two cells result which, although they contain the same genome in full, can differ in which genes are turned on and making proteins. Sometimes a 'self-sustaining feedback loop' ensures that a cell maintains its identity and passes it on. Less understood is the mechanism of epigenetics by which chromatin modification may provide cellular memory by blocking or allowing transcription. A major feature of multicellular animals is the use of morphogen gradients, which in effect provide a positioning system that tells a cell where in the body it is, and hence what sort of cell to become. A gene that is turned on in one cell may make a product that leaves the cell and diffuses through adjacent cells, entering them and turning on genes only when it is present above a certain threshold level. These cells are thus induced into a new fate, and may even generate other morphogens that signal back to the original cell. Over longer distances morphogens may use the active process of signal transduction. Such signalling controls embryogenesis, the building of a body plan from scratch through a series of sequential steps. They also control and maintain adult bodies through feedback processes, and the loss of such feedback because of a mutation can be responsible for the cell proliferation that is seen in cancer. In parallel with this process of building structure, the gene cascade turns on genes that make structural proteins that give each cell the physical properties it needs.It has been suggested that, because biological molecular interactions are intrinsically stochastic, gene networks are the result of cellular processes and not their cause (i.e. cellular Darwinism). However, recent experimental evidence has favored the attractor view of cell fates.
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