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Expression analysis of a chicory fructan 1‐exohydrolase gene
Expression analysis of a chicory fructan 1‐exohydrolase gene

... Three fructanase cDNAs (1-FEH I, 1-FEH IIa, and IIb) have been identi®ed in Cichorium intybus (Van den Ende et al., 2001). Enzyme activity for 1-FEH I was ascertained by heterologous expression in potato, and the identity of all three cDNA clones were con®rmed by comparison with trypsin digest and m ...
Mutation Screening of the EXT Genes in Patients with Hereditary
Mutation Screening of the EXT Genes in Patients with Hereditary

... and G at position 966) were 0.833 and 0.167, respectively. However, results obtained from healthy (non-HME) individuals were 0.9 and 0.1, respectively. In other words, the frequency of G allele was higher in HME versus non-HME individuals in this study. This result suggests that c966T R G might be u ...
Genetic Disorders
Genetic Disorders

... compound heterozygotes, individuals with two mutant alleles and no normal allele, because in these diseases, one normal gene copy is able to compensate for the mutant allele and prevent the disease from occurring. Because an individual inherits only one of the two alleles at any locus from one paren ...
Does genetic diversity limit disease spread in natural host
Does genetic diversity limit disease spread in natural host

... genotype can only infect one genetically determined resistance phenotype in the host population, which is the standard assumption of the matching-alleles model for infection. The results suggest that R0 for each parasite genotype i depends on total host density, as well as the frequency of the match ...
Abstract - BioMed Central
Abstract - BioMed Central

... created for sites that are at most d =15 nucleotides apart and having identical phases. For TSSs (Figure 3d) and stop codons, the same intrinsic phase identity applies, but no limitation for d is set. Theorem H: splice site loci are conserved and of identical phase Edges are scored according to thre ...
Document
Document

... • Fourth (now known as the law of segregation): the two alleles for a heritable character separate (segregate) during gamete formation and end up in different gametes • Thus, an egg or a sperm gets only one of the two alleles that are present in the organism • This segregation of alleles correspond ...
Sex-Specific Genetic Control of Diabetic
Sex-Specific Genetic Control of Diabetic

... aimed to identify novel genetic factors contributing to neuropathic pain in diabetic patients. The first study (Meng et al., 2015b) published earlier this year in the European Journal of Pain identified a cluster in the Chr8p21.3, next to GFRA2 gene locus, associated with cases of neuropathic pain defi ...
P generation
P generation

... • Fourth (now known as the law of segregation): the two alleles for a heritable character separate (segregate) during gamete formation and end up in different gametes • Thus, an egg or a sperm gets only one of the two alleles that are present in the organism • This segregation of alleles correspond ...
Mitochondrial transfer: Ethical, legal and social implications in assisted reproduction
Mitochondrial transfer: Ethical, legal and social implications in assisted reproduction

... parents, while only inheriting the mtDNA from the donor. Mitochondrial DNA possesses less than 30 genes, while nuclear DNA encodes approximately 25 000 genes. Furthermore, mtDNA is highly conserved among humans (Professor Douglas C. Wallace, University of Pennsylvania, personal communication), and t ...
Analysis of a piwi-related Gene Implicates Small RNAs in
Analysis of a piwi-related Gene Implicates Small RNAs in

... There are 8 piwi-related TWI Genes in Tetrahymena ...
Case Report Section
Case Report Section

... 3p21 is a recurrent breakpoint in MDS/AML and tMDS/t-AML suggesting, 3p21 site is likely to contain a gene (genes) involved in the pathogenesis of t(3;4)(p21;q34). One previous case of t(3;4)(p21;q34) was found in a refractory anemia, making this anomaly recurrent. The similar cytogenetic appearance ...
Recent highlights of the China Rice Functional Genomics Program
Recent highlights of the China Rice Functional Genomics Program

... for making hybrids. However, it is very tedious and timeconsuming to introduce a fertility restorer gene into an elite alien genetic background by conventional breeding. This obstacle could be overcome by specifically introducing fertility restorer genes into alien elite lines through a transgenic a ...
ANNEX 1
ANNEX 1

... to the Accreditation Criteria for Medical Laboratories, as defined in the Standard ...
Level 2 Unit 8 - Science of Health
Level 2 Unit 8 - Science of Health

... and well-being problems to society. Science is constantly providing treatments for many diseases and infections that cause problems within society. However, consideration needs to be given to the risks involved and the preventive measures that can be taken. By completing this unit learners will unde ...
Evolution of Gene Order and Chromosome Number in
Evolution of Gene Order and Chromosome Number in

... all 55 duplicated chromosomal regions arose simultaneously in a whole-genome duplication making yeast, in effect, a degenerate tetraploid. Some regions of the K. lactis genome have gene orders that correspond to an amalgamation of genes from both copies of duplicated regions in S. cerevisiae (Wolfe ...
Honors Biology Lab Manual
Honors Biology Lab Manual

... they synthesize the pigments that color your skin, hair, and eyes; they digest your food they make (and sometime are) the hormones that regulate your growth; they defend you from infection. In short, proteins proteins determine your body’s form and carry out its functions. ​DNA determines what all o ...
Adaptive Evolution of Pelvic Reduction in Sticklebacks by Recurrent
Adaptive Evolution of Pelvic Reduction in Sticklebacks by Recurrent

... selection or genetic drift, and the relative importance of coding and regulatory changes in evolution are currently being actively investigated (1–4). One of the classic examples of major evolutionary change in vertebrates is the extensive modification of paired appendages seen in different species ...
20. Transposable Genetic Elements
20. Transposable Genetic Elements

... receptor and the regulator are termed controlling elements. In the examples considered so far, the unstable allele is said to be nonautonomous: it can revert only in the presence of the regulator. Sometimes, however, a system such as the Ac-Ds system can produce an unstable allele that is autonomous ...
Year 13 Biology, 2010.
Year 13 Biology, 2010.

... Cost is approximately $170 and more information will be handed out closer to the time. Anyone allocated a place but unable to attend must inform the teacher by the end of Term 1 or they will be expected to pay the full amount. ...
Defective sister-chromatid cohesion, aneuploidy
Defective sister-chromatid cohesion, aneuploidy

... derived from Type II RTS patients, suggesting that it may be a cellular feature of this syndrome (29,31 – 34). Therefore, we utilized cells from our mouse model to interrogate the nature of genomic instability in Recql4 2/2 cells. Chromosome analysis was carried out using primary mouse embryonic fib ...
WORD - ctahr
WORD - ctahr

... differences between treatments were observed for shoot dry weight. However, significant differences between strains were found for both percentage of nitrogen and total nitrogen in the shoot. Wildtype strain CE-3 had the highest value for total nitrogen in the shoot. Strains EM407 and CFN2202 were i ...
BIOINFORMATICS
BIOINFORMATICS

... spectrometry data (Bhanot et al., 2004), and adapt it for cancer diagnosis from gene expression data. We first apply a pattern-based multivariate approach to identify a subset of predictive genes out of a pool of genes by requiring them to satisfy stringent filtering criteria. Next, we combine the p ...
Is myeloma an inherited cancer?
Is myeloma an inherited cancer?

... of genes packaged in structures known as chromosomes. The entire genetic material of humans Myeloma Infosheet Series ...
Floral organ identity genes in the orchid
Floral organ identity genes in the orchid

... angiosperms, orchids are unique in their floral patterning, particularly in floral structures and organ identity. The ABCDE model was proposed as a general model to explain flower development in diverse plant groups, however the extent to which this model is applicable to orchids is still unknown. T ...
Colon Cancer by
Colon Cancer by

... beef induces and dietary rye bran prevents formation of intestinal polyps. • Several studies have suggested that red meat and processed meats, through breakdown products, increase DNA damage and cancer risk ...
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Genome (book)

Genome: The Autobiography of a Species in 23 Chapters is a 1999 popular science book by Matt Ridley, published by Fourth Estate.
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