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ANTHR1 - Physical Anthropology
ANTHR1 - Physical Anthropology

... c. applies only to sexually reproducing organisms d. produces more and more complex forms within all species 9. Approximately how many genes do humans have? a. 100,000 c. 75,000 b. 30,000 d. 3 billion 10. Maria is heterozygous for tongue rolling. When she produces gametes, each gamete carries either ...
Poster
Poster

... pairs. However, the use of this antibiotic may cause unintentional drug-drug interactions (DDIs) when used in combination with other medications due to its metabolism by CYP1A2. The transformation of a nitrogen group into a prodrug should lessen this interaction. Patients taking ciprofloxacin should ...
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Nucleic Acids: RNA and chemistry

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Biotecnology

... information in many fields of biology • The more similar the nucleotide sequences between two species, the more closely related these species are in their ...
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Recombinant DNA Techniques - The University of Oklahoma`s

... Genetic engineering has become one of the most powerful tools in modern biochemistry and biology. Recombinant DNA technology is widely used in both research and industry. Many new companies are being created for research and development of techniques that are now classified as biotechnology. In the ...
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Teacher shi 18940209087 Email: QQ

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Case Study Powerpoints - Westford Academy Ap Bio

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... Clote, P., Ferrè, F., Kranakis, E., and Krizanc, D. (2005). Structural rna has lower folding energy than random RNA of the same dinucleotide frequency. RNA. in press. Coventry, A., Kleitman, D., and Berger, B. (2004). MSARi: Multiple sequence alignments for statistical detection of RNA secondary str ...
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... values, nor did the frequencies for any of the other dinucleotides. CpG dinucleotide depression is observed in organisms in which DNA can be methylated on cytosine residues, most notably vertebrates with CpG frequencies of 0.2–0.4 of the expected values [S1]. CpG dinucleotide frequency is thought to ...
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NCEA Level 1 Science (90948) 2016

... Sexual reproduction involves combining DNA from two parents using gametes. These gametes (sex cells) are formed during meiosis. Gametes have only one set of chromosomes, and so these can be combined with another parent to make a unique individual. This increases variation [OR crossing over OR indepe ...
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119KB - NZQA

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Acid-Base Catalysis

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The target of personalized medicine moves ever closer

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Phenylketonuria (PKU)

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Deoxyribozyme



Deoxyribozymes, also called DNA enzymes, DNAzymes, or catalytic DNA, are DNA oligonucleotides that are capable of catalyzing specific chemical reactions, similar to the action of other biological enzymes, such as proteins or ribozymes (enzymes composed of RNA).However, in contrast to the abundance of protein enzymes in biological systems and the discovery of biological ribozymes in the 1980s,there are no known naturally occurring deoxyribozymes.Deoxyribozymes should not be confused with DNA aptamers which are oligonucleotides that selectively bind a target ligand, but do not catalyze a subsequent chemical reaction.With the exception of ribozymes, nucleic acid molecules within cells primarily serve as storage of genetic information due to its ability to form complementary base pairs, which allows for high-fidelity copying and transfer of genetic information. In contrast, nucleic acid molecules are more limited in their catalytic ability, in comparison to protein enzymes, to just three types of interactions: hydrogen bonding, pi stacking, and metal-ion coordination. This is due to the limited number of functional groups of the nucleic acid monomers: while proteins are built from up to twenty different amino acids with various functional groups, nucleic acids are built from just four chemically similar nucleobases. In addition, DNA lacks the 2'-hydroxyl group found in RNA which limits the catalytic competency of deoxyribozymes even in comparison to ribozymes.In addition to the inherent inferiority of DNA catalytic activity, the apparent lack of naturally occurring deoxyribozymes may also be due to the primarily double-stranded conformation of DNA in biological systems which would limit its physical flexibility and ability to form tertiary structures, and so would drastically limit the ability of double-stranded DNA to act as a catalyst; though there are a few known instances of biological single-stranded DNA such as multicopy single-stranded DNA (msDNA), certain viral genomes, and the replication fork formed during DNA replication. Further structural differences between DNA and RNA may also play a role in the lack of biological deoxyribozymes, such as the additional methyl group of the DNA base thymidine compared to the RNA base uracil or the tendency of DNA to adopt the B-form helix while RNA tends to adopt the A-form helix. However, it has also been shown that DNA can form structures that RNA cannot, which suggests that, though there are differences in structures that each can form, neither is inherently more or less catalytic due to their possible structural motifs.
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