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Breast cancer is a common disease in modern onco-surgical
Breast cancer is a common disease in modern onco-surgical

... alterations tested were in the BRCA1 gene (185delAG and 5382insC) and one in the BRCA2 gene (6174delT). With advances in gene amplification and mapping using DNA microarray, today over a 100 different alterations of BRCA1 and BRCA2 have been identified along with many other genes that are involved ...
Cocci.GR.letter
Cocci.GR.letter

... point would strengthen the manuscript. To be clear, this discussion is not referring to simple sequence repeats, but large, interspersed (putatively transposable) sequences. We have clarified this position in the results: “Although the non-repetitive sequence of these genomes differs only by 400 kb ...
Full-Text PDF
Full-Text PDF

... 151 in Ichthyophthirius multifiliis, Tetrahymena malaccensis, T. paravorax, T. pigmentosa, T. pyriformis, and T. thermophile. This suggests that the nad2 gene overlaps the promoter upstream of nad7. HCE 299, containing a potential promoter, has been found within the nad2 coding regions in Tetrahymen ...
here
here

... Am J Med Genet B Neuropsychiatr Genet. 2007 Jun 5;144B(4):492-5. Association of the neuropilin-2 (NRP2) gene polymorphisms with autism in Chinese Han population. Wu S, Yue W, Jia M, Ruan Y, Lu T, Gong X, Shuang M, Liu J, Yang X, Zhang D. Institute of Mental Health, Peking University, Beijing, China. ...
A Variant within the DNA Repair Gene XRCC3 Is
A Variant within the DNA Repair Gene XRCC3 Is

... through the activation of various DNA repair pathways. DNA repair systems are responsible for maintaining the integrity of the genome and have a critical role in protecting against mutations that can lead to cancer (4, 5). Absent or incorrect repair can initiate carcinogenesis through the activation ...
GENE NUMBER, KIND, AND SIZE IN DROSOPHILA The
GENE NUMBER, KIND, AND SIZE IN DROSOPHILA The

... to render the beams in any of these experiments more nearly monochromatic. Other data on filtered and unfiltered copper rays indicate, however, that only a moderate error is introduced by this slight heterogeneity. The current through the X-ray tube during the irradiations was held constant at 4 mil ...
Widespread Organ Expression of the Rat Proenkephalin Gene
Widespread Organ Expression of the Rat Proenkephalin Gene

... that peptides typically associated with neural and/or endocrine functions also have growth-promoting effects and may be involved in tumorigenesis (1, 2). Included in this group are opioid peptides such as /3-endorphin and the enkephalins. /S-Endorphin has modulatory effects on the proliferation of l ...
Pleiotropy and the Genomic Location of Sexually Selected Genes
Pleiotropy and the Genomic Location of Sexually Selected Genes

... model (which considers pleiotropic effects). Evidence largely based on reciprocal crosses supports the notion of sex linkage. However, although they infer genetic contribution, reciprocal crosses cannot identify the genes or their pleiotropic effects. By surveying the genome of Drosophila melanogast ...
Medical Genetics: An Overview
Medical Genetics: An Overview

... Many single gene disorders and most chromosomal aberrations present with widespread involvement of many organs and systems, systemic genetic syndromes are not caused by either of these mechanisms. Some of these disorders, however, might be caused by still undefined single genes or by some other unkn ...
Document
Document

... include essential genes which render cells non-viable if they are knocked out. The fraction of essential TFs shows an almost monotomic increase with number of active conditions. TFs active under more conditions are more likely to be essential than those that are only active under specific conditions ...
Identification of an Arabidopsis thaliana gene for
Identification of an Arabidopsis thaliana gene for

... for investigation of CL function [8,12]. The results obtained with the mutant demonstrated that CL is not essential for growth of E. coli. A mutant of the yeast was also made and it was shown that the mutant is viable on fermentable and nonfermentable carbon sources at 16–30 °C, but cannot form colo ...
Karyotype Lab information
Karyotype Lab information

... nitrogen base pairs which serve as genes. 3. Each gene controls the production of a protein in the organism which creates a trait (characteristic). ...
Electrically Mediated Plasmid DNA Delivery to Hepatocellular
Electrically Mediated Plasmid DNA Delivery to Hepatocellular

... plasmid gene delivery to mouse skin cells was first demonstrated in 199110 and is more effective than liposome delivery or particle bombardment.11 This method has recently been used to deliver reporter genes in vivo to normal rat hepatocytes,12,13 rat brain tumor cells,14 mouse testes,15 mouse melan ...
Gene Section TP53 (tumor protein p53 (Li-Fraumeni syndrome)) in Oncology and Haematology
Gene Section TP53 (tumor protein p53 (Li-Fraumeni syndrome)) in Oncology and Haematology

... human cancers, ranging from 5% to 80% depending on the type, stage and etiology of tumors. Most mutations are missense (75%) and other include non-sense (7.5%), deletions, insertions or splicing mutations (17.5%). There are some hot-spots for mutations at CpG dinucleotides at codon positions 175, 24 ...
Viruses
Viruses

... • During the Lysogenic cycle the viral genome behaves differently, the λ DNA molecule is incorporated (by genetic recombination called crossing over) into a specific site on the host cell’s chromosome which is then known as prophage. ...
3 LECTURES ON "DELEUZE AND BIOLOGY" John Protevi LSU
3 LECTURES ON "DELEUZE AND BIOLOGY" John Protevi LSU

... counts is differential reproduction, no matter how it’s achieved. My colleague Dominique Homberger writes: this scenario needs considerable nuancing, as it presupposes a fixed environment against the “borders” of which immobile species press (a container image). But organisms are mobile and environm ...
Gene Section GMPS (guanine monphosphate synthetase) Atlas of Genetics and Cytogenetics
Gene Section GMPS (guanine monphosphate synthetase) Atlas of Genetics and Cytogenetics

... Enzyme of the de novo synthesis of guanine nucleotides: amidotransferase that catalyzes the amination of xanthosine 5 prime monophosphate to form GMP in the presence of ATP and glutamine; GTP is also involved in many enzymatic reactions important for cell division. ...
Mendel`s Laws There are two main Laws of Inheritance developed
Mendel`s Laws There are two main Laws of Inheritance developed

... So  what  exactly  is  Law  of  Independent  Assortment?     Law  of  Independent  Assortment  is  saying  that  the  different  alleles  (Color  and  Candy  type)  are  treated  independently   from  each  other.  In  our  first  attem ...
Introduction to GeneBreak
Introduction to GeneBreak

... The GeneBreak package aims to systematically identify genes recurrently affected by copy number aberration-associated breakpoint locations that indicate underlying DNA breaks and thereby genes involved in structural variants. This is a short tutorial on how to use the GeneBreak package. It describes ...
The diagrams below show two different scenarios for a pair of
The diagrams below show two different scenarios for a pair of

... percent of the offspring because these offspring show a dominant allele from the wing-size gene combined with a recessive allele from the eye-color gene, or vice versa. The student may not understand that if recombination had not occurred at all due to the genes being linked, all the offspring would ...
Mutants
Mutants

... organisms could now be applied to somatic cells ...
Possible role of Aurora-C in meiosis
Possible role of Aurora-C in meiosis

... (INCENP/Aurora-B) in the testis (14). Together, these findings strongly support a model, in which INCENP recruits AuroraC and -B to their appropriate locations and activates them to execute their meiotic functions in spermatocytes (14). Consistent with this notion, INCENP was reported to bind (21, 2 ...
Document
Document

... Fig. 15-4 Fig. 15-12 ...
Some of the peer-reviewed publications identified during the initial literature... ER TA studies were not abstracted for inclusion in this... 9.0
Some of the peer-reviewed publications identified during the initial literature... ER TA studies were not abstracted for inclusion in this... 9.0

... In addition, Gray et al. (1997) discussed the major advantages and disadvantages of yeast-based in vitro ER TA assays. These assays use recombinant, stably transformed yeast (S. cerevisiae) cells that contain the complete ER gene, or specific portions of ER from humans or other species of interest, ...
Mendelian Genetics and its Development
Mendelian Genetics and its Development

... that traits are transmitted directly from parent to the offspring, but Mendel concluded that there exist discrete particles responsible for the appearance of particular traits. Namely, each parent contributes particles, or genetic units, to the offspring. Now, these particles are called genes. Mende ...
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Polycomb Group Proteins and Cancer

The Polycomb-group proteins (PcGs) are a family of proteins that use epigenetic mechanisms to maintain or repress expression of their target genes. They were originally discovered in Drosophila (fruit flies), though they've been shown to be conserved in many species due to their vital roles in embryonic development. These proteins' ability to alter gene expression has made them targets of investigation for research groups seeking to understand disease pathology and oncology.
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