Slide 1
... 2. Find the pair of clusters with the shortest distance, and regroup them into a single cluster. 3. Repeat 2 until there is a single cluster. One needs to define a (dis)similarity metric between two groups. There are several possibilities Average linkage: the average distance between objects fro ...
... 2. Find the pair of clusters with the shortest distance, and regroup them into a single cluster. 3. Repeat 2 until there is a single cluster. One needs to define a (dis)similarity metric between two groups. There are several possibilities Average linkage: the average distance between objects fro ...
Human Heredity - Fort Bend ISD
... Trisomy: Some chromosomal disorders are caused by having three copies of one chromosome. This is called trisomy. In trisomies, the gamete of one parent donated two of one type of chromosome to the child and the gamete of the other parent donated one chromosome (like normal). ...
... Trisomy: Some chromosomal disorders are caused by having three copies of one chromosome. This is called trisomy. In trisomies, the gamete of one parent donated two of one type of chromosome to the child and the gamete of the other parent donated one chromosome (like normal). ...
Promoter Analysis for Intestinally
... a. Find conserved sites in the upstream regions of 74 intestinally-expressed genes b. Also analyze the orthologues of the genes in C. briggsae and C. remanei c. Provide evidence, if possible, for the ELT-2 theory of intestinal gene regulation 2. Summary: a. Motif Discovery is complete for all 74 C. ...
... a. Find conserved sites in the upstream regions of 74 intestinally-expressed genes b. Also analyze the orthologues of the genes in C. briggsae and C. remanei c. Provide evidence, if possible, for the ELT-2 theory of intestinal gene regulation 2. Summary: a. Motif Discovery is complete for all 74 C. ...
P. falciparum - University of Notre Dame
... •Plastids are the third genome •Intracellular organelles •Terrestrial plants, algae, apicomplexans •Functions in plants and algae Photosynthesis Oxidation of water Reduction of NADP Synthesis of ATP Fatty acid biosynthesis Aromatic amino acid biosynthesis ...
... •Plastids are the third genome •Intracellular organelles •Terrestrial plants, algae, apicomplexans •Functions in plants and algae Photosynthesis Oxidation of water Reduction of NADP Synthesis of ATP Fatty acid biosynthesis Aromatic amino acid biosynthesis ...
5 GENETIC LINKAGE AND MAPPING
... When large numbers of mutations are available for a species, genes on the same chromosome will show evidence of linkage to one another (<50% recombination frequency). Genes will fall into LINKAGE GROUPS. The number of linkage groups will equal the haploid number of chromosomes. The linkage of genes ...
... When large numbers of mutations are available for a species, genes on the same chromosome will show evidence of linkage to one another (<50% recombination frequency). Genes will fall into LINKAGE GROUPS. The number of linkage groups will equal the haploid number of chromosomes. The linkage of genes ...
GENETICS – BIO 300
... gene evolution ... relative positions of genes in related organisms infer history of change ...
... gene evolution ... relative positions of genes in related organisms infer history of change ...
Chapter 5 I. Multiple Alleles
... For traits that show anticipation, mutant alleles are unstable and may change over even one generation. They are caused by trinucleotide repeats; more repeats results in earlier and/or more severe expression of the mutant phenotype. ...
... For traits that show anticipation, mutant alleles are unstable and may change over even one generation. They are caused by trinucleotide repeats; more repeats results in earlier and/or more severe expression of the mutant phenotype. ...
Heredity Basics Powerpoint
... individual genes out of a cell. But in Darwin's time, it was impossible to see any of that. No one was sure how animals or plants passed down traits. And Darwin knew that the lack of an explanation forheredity left a big gap in his theory of natural ...
... individual genes out of a cell. But in Darwin's time, it was impossible to see any of that. No one was sure how animals or plants passed down traits. And Darwin knew that the lack of an explanation forheredity left a big gap in his theory of natural ...
Plant Comparative Genomics
... Sorghum as a model for evolutionary genetic studies Sorghum, one of the world’s major grain crops, is an African genus of about 25 species of grasses distributed throughout tropical and subtropical regions. We have constructed a recombinant inbred line (RIL) population of approximately 250 plants fr ...
... Sorghum as a model for evolutionary genetic studies Sorghum, one of the world’s major grain crops, is an African genus of about 25 species of grasses distributed throughout tropical and subtropical regions. We have constructed a recombinant inbred line (RIL) population of approximately 250 plants fr ...
Aligning reads with Galaxy
... – Highly similar transcripts are likely to be assembled into single transcripts. – Sensitive to read-errors. Hard to tell errors from low-abundance transcripts. ...
... – Highly similar transcripts are likely to be assembled into single transcripts. – Sensitive to read-errors. Hard to tell errors from low-abundance transcripts. ...
III. Mechanisms contributing to antibody diversity
... b) Making proper exons from these segments requires rearranging and rejoining the segments to form immunoglobulin gene sequences C. L chain gene organization 1. Three genes code for each immunoglobulin L chain a) Two gene segments encode the variable domain of the human chain (1) The initial gene ...
... b) Making proper exons from these segments requires rearranging and rejoining the segments to form immunoglobulin gene sequences C. L chain gene organization 1. Three genes code for each immunoglobulin L chain a) Two gene segments encode the variable domain of the human chain (1) The initial gene ...
PowerPoint slides - University of Maryland at College Park
... satisfy the minimum similarity threshold Help users determine the ...
... satisfy the minimum similarity threshold Help users determine the ...
Slide 1 - Port Fest Baltimore 2015
... – blood does not clot properly; can literally bleed to death ...
... – blood does not clot properly; can literally bleed to death ...
Dosage compensation: do birds do it as well?
... transcription or in post-transcriptional or translational processes. The observation of equalized levels of mRNA expression [4], for example, would support regulation at the transcription stage. If any of these mechanisms is valid, birds could achieve dosage compensation in the same way as nematodes ...
... transcription or in post-transcriptional or translational processes. The observation of equalized levels of mRNA expression [4], for example, would support regulation at the transcription stage. If any of these mechanisms is valid, birds could achieve dosage compensation in the same way as nematodes ...
Problems with Imbalance
... – biological instruction for building organisms • Chromosomes – Consist primarily of DNA – Contain genes and instructions for how genes are expressed • Genes – Segments of DNA that provide a blueprint for making proteins – Proteins are the building blocks of the organism ...
... – biological instruction for building organisms • Chromosomes – Consist primarily of DNA – Contain genes and instructions for how genes are expressed • Genes – Segments of DNA that provide a blueprint for making proteins – Proteins are the building blocks of the organism ...
Document
... Resistance to mupirocin, a topical antimicrobial agent used against S. aureus, appears to be mediated by amino-acid substitutions in isoleucyl-tRNA synthetase (ITS) which mupirocin normally inactivates. The source of this mutant ITS is not recent random mutation of S. aureus ITS, but rather a plasmi ...
... Resistance to mupirocin, a topical antimicrobial agent used against S. aureus, appears to be mediated by amino-acid substitutions in isoleucyl-tRNA synthetase (ITS) which mupirocin normally inactivates. The source of this mutant ITS is not recent random mutation of S. aureus ITS, but rather a plasmi ...
04/20
... 4. Telomeric and centromeric regions Features of Facultative Heterochromatin 1. Referred to as silent chromatin 2. Potential to become heterochromatic (Barr body) ...
... 4. Telomeric and centromeric regions Features of Facultative Heterochromatin 1. Referred to as silent chromatin 2. Potential to become heterochromatic (Barr body) ...
1 Chromosome Mapping in Eukaryotes
... 2. In Drosophila, ebony (e) is recessive and the dominant allele (e+) results in tan body colour. The recessive mutation (d) causes dumpy (shortened) wings while the dominant allele (d+) causes long, normal wings. A tan female with normal wings is crossed with an ebony male with dumpy wings. The res ...
... 2. In Drosophila, ebony (e) is recessive and the dominant allele (e+) results in tan body colour. The recessive mutation (d) causes dumpy (shortened) wings while the dominant allele (d+) causes long, normal wings. A tan female with normal wings is crossed with an ebony male with dumpy wings. The res ...