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Genes - University of Arizona | Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
Genes - University of Arizona | Ecology and Evolutionary Biology

... Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology The University of Arizona ...
Glossary( PDF format / 71KB )
Glossary( PDF format / 71KB )

... This gene sequence analysis technology assigns a unique identifier to each DNA molecule, allowing each gene to be identified, and then amplifies the DNA, enabling a high degree of specificity and sensitivity. This technology features a lower error rate than general next-generation gene sequence anal ...
Slides - Department of Computer Science
Slides - Department of Computer Science

... Strong background in algorithms and data structures Basic understanding of statistics and probability Appetite to learn some biology ...
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Slide 1

... cAMP receptor protein (CAP), acting as a homodimer can bind both cAMP and DNA. When glucose is absent (high cAMP state), CAP binds to its positive regulatory element increasing transcription of the lac operon 50-fold. Lac repressor is a tetrameric complex that in the absence of lactose binds tightly ...
Biology 105 - Montgomery College
Biology 105 - Montgomery College

... While gliding aimlessly in a puddle, a "male" and a "female" water strider encounter each other in the moonlight. Becoming intoxicated in each other’s pheromones (sexual attractant molecules), and being consenting adults, they decide to procreate. The fertilized eggs are laid and the ensuing spring ...
Chapter 16 Practice Problems
Chapter 16 Practice Problems

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100 colorectal adenomatous polyps

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2015 Midterm Study Guide

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... genetic code are common to all organisms. 6C (S) Explain the purpose and process of transcription and translation using DNA and RNA models. 6D (S) Recognize that gene expression is a regulated process. 6E (R) Identify and illustrate changes in DNA and evaluate the significance of these changes. 10/2 ...
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... 7. The allele of the gene above is dominant and codes for red kernel pigment (it is designated as R). Another allele of this gene, the r allele (which is recessive), codes for white kernel pigment and is the result of a mutation in the R allele. In the r allele, the second nucleotide (base) in the s ...
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Genomic and comparative genomic analysis

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... "read" in two steps: transcription and translation. In transcription, a portion of the doublestranded DNA template gives rise to a single-stranded RNA molecule. In some cases, the RNA molecule itself is a "finished product" that serves some important function within the cell. Often, however, transcr ...
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CHAPTER 14: Genes in Action Essential Ideas

... DOWNS SYNDROME =TRISOMY21 (3 copies of a chromosome 21) mental delays, changes in blood vessels and connective tissue ...
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... You have designed a fancy transgene with a splice acceptor site, the GFP (ATG-stop) gene and a pA. This type of transgene is referred to as a “splice trap”. In order to see GFP expression in the nucleus, where does this transgene need to be incorporated in the above gene?___________________ What els ...
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Chapter 12 Notes

... more than two possible alleles for a trait. Blood type again is an example, three possible alleles A, B or O.  D. Polygenic Traits: Takes more than one gene pair to code for a trait. *Height requires 3 gene pairs *Hair, eye color and skin tone require 7 gene pairs. ...
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... overrepresented in the set of transcripts differentially expressed (based on a 1% FDR cutoff) between the urban and rural samples. The top two networks are focused on the Fos and Myc transcription factors, and every one of the genes that the IPKB indicate as interacting either genetically or biochem ...
Chapter 13 Chromosomes
Chapter 13 Chromosomes

... If it is that highly conserved it must be vital, and variants would be selected out of ...
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RNA-Seq



RNA-seq (RNA sequencing), also called whole transcriptome shotgun sequencing (WTSS), is a technology that uses the capabilities of next-generation sequencing to reveal a snapshot of RNA presence and quantity from a genome at a given moment in time.
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