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Gene Section PLAGL2 (pleomorphic adenoma gene-like 2) Atlas of Genetics and Cytogenetics
Gene Section PLAGL2 (pleomorphic adenoma gene-like 2) Atlas of Genetics and Cytogenetics

... involving the lysine residues as the acetylation target. Therefore, it appears that the activity of PLAGL2 is tightly modulated by both sumoylation and acetylation, which may have opposite effects on their transactivation. Tip60 can modulate PLAGL2 function through both acetylation and inhibition of ...
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Solid Tumour Section t(6;22)(p21;q12) in undifferentiated sarcoma Atlas of Genetics and Cytogenetics

... repeats, 3 arginine/glycine rich domains (RGG regions), a RNA recognition motif, and a RanBP2 type Zinc finger. Role in transcriptional regulation for specific genes and in mRNA splicing. ...
Lecture Slides - METU Computer Engineering
Lecture Slides - METU Computer Engineering

... terms of molecules (in the sense of physicalchemistry) and then applying “informatics” techniques (derived from disciplines such as applied math, CS, and statistics) to understand and organize the information associated with these molecules, on a large-scale. • Bioinformatics is a practical discipli ...
Ji et al J Theor Biol 2010
Ji et al J Theor Biol 2010

... Messenger RNA polyadenylation is one of the essential processing steps during eukaryotic gene expression. The site of polyadenylation [(poly(A) site] marks the end of a transcript, which is also the end of a gene. A computation program that is able to recognize poly(A) sites would not only prove use ...
Genome organisation and evolution
Genome organisation and evolution

... In vertebrates, there are multiple clusters of Hox genes: the mouse has four clusters, each located on a different chromosome and covering over 100 kb HOM genes in Drosophila are found in two clusters, Antennipedia and Bithorax, on the same chromosome In amphioxus – a class of marine invertebrates w ...
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File S1.

... At this step of the pipeline, we mapped reads to their corresponding position on the L. monocytogenes genome. The next task is to identify expressed regions of interest, i.e. those regions harboring potentially regulatory sRNAs. In order to do so, we first remove all reads corresponding to long tran ...
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crowley-genes

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Genetics - Mrs. Yu`s Science Classes
Genetics - Mrs. Yu`s Science Classes

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Nucleic Acids and the RNA World
Nucleic Acids and the RNA World

... • So as long as RNA is catalytic, then it does make sense that it is possible to replicate itself if the perfect situation arises • RNA is catalytic through RNA enzymes called RIBOZYMES. • It has been observed in an experiment that the ribozymes that were isolated had the ability to catalyze BOTH th ...
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12.3 and12.4 notes CD

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Introduction to Bioinformatics and Databases
Introduction to Bioinformatics and Databases

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Identification of a factor IX point mutation using SSCP analysis and

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Assessing the gene content of the megagenome : sugar pine (Pinus

... (Dang et al. 2011a, Dang et al. 2011b). These findings support studies that DNA replication machinery can be exploited for promoting stress tolerance in crops (Tuteja et al. 2012). Genes related to osmosensor activity were uniquely over-represented in NaCl-treated samples, including three different ...
Lecture 4a (1/28/13) "Central Dogma"
Lecture 4a (1/28/13) "Central Dogma"

... and deciphered with the aid of protein enzymes, and proteins can only be produced by means of genetic information from DNA? Which came first, the chicken or the egg? [Sid] Altman and [Tom] Cech have now found the missing link. Probably it was the RNA molecule that came first. This molecule has the p ...
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Proteins to Phenotype

... Disease affecting early development has severe consequences. Some diseases may be fixed with gene therapy. Others require simple diet changes! ...
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Genome Annotation: From Sequence to Biology
Genome Annotation: From Sequence to Biology

... genes and proteins in an organism. Why do we need to predict the number of genes and proteins in the cell? It appears that most studies identify genes based on phenotypes. For proteins, many methodologies exist for identifying protein function. I cannot see the purpose of this prediction--pardon my ...
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Powerpoint Presentation: Genetic Screening

... Short pieces of DNA or RNA (100 – 1000 bases) complementary to a given sequence of nucleotides  Target DNA denatured (strands separate)  Probe added and binds to complementary sequence  Radioactive marker attached to probe so it can be identified ...
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11_Instructor_Guide - Fullfrontalanatomy.com

... at a home. The signal is converted to another form (pushing a button rings a bell) and activities change within the house as someone comes to answer the door. 9.Students might wonder why a patch of color is all the same on the cat’s skin in Figure 11.4, if every cell has an equal chance of being one ...
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Study Guide Chapters 8-9 Nucleic Acids, and Molecular Engineering

... From ‘melting’ of DNA what enzyme did we realize had to exist? What ‘chaperone’ like protein needed also to exist? What makes RNA polymerase unique in this regard? 11. What are hybrid heteroduplexes? What can you do with this phenomena? 12. Explain mutations? How does that help in our understanding ...
Nucleic Acids Test Topics
Nucleic Acids Test Topics

... - Mutations are changes in the DNA nucleotide sequence - Mutations are caused by mutagens. Examples include x-rays, UV light, chemicals, etc. - Point mutations are the change of one single nucleotide in the DNA - Frameshift mutations are the addition/insertion or deletion of one side nucleotide pair ...
What is Genetic Engineering?
What is Genetic Engineering?

... In medicine, they isolate a virus or a gene coded into DNA and cut it out. In the case of producing a vaccine for a virus, they isolate and cut the gene out for the virus and inject it into a carrier cell, usually in bacteria, and allow the organism to code the virus into it's DNA and make an artifi ...
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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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