• Study Resource
  • Explore Categories
    • Arts & Humanities
    • Business
    • Engineering & Technology
    • Foreign Language
    • History
    • Math
    • Science
    • Social Science

    Top subcategories

    • Advanced Math
    • Algebra
    • Basic Math
    • Calculus
    • Geometry
    • Linear Algebra
    • Pre-Algebra
    • Pre-Calculus
    • Statistics And Probability
    • Trigonometry
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Astronomy
    • Astrophysics
    • Biology
    • Chemistry
    • Earth Science
    • Environmental Science
    • Health Science
    • Physics
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Anthropology
    • Law
    • Political Science
    • Psychology
    • Sociology
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Accounting
    • Economics
    • Finance
    • Management
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Aerospace Engineering
    • Bioengineering
    • Chemical Engineering
    • Civil Engineering
    • Computer Science
    • Electrical Engineering
    • Industrial Engineering
    • Mechanical Engineering
    • Web Design
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Architecture
    • Communications
    • English
    • Gender Studies
    • Music
    • Performing Arts
    • Philosophy
    • Religious Studies
    • Writing
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Ancient History
    • European History
    • US History
    • World History
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Croatian
    • Czech
    • Finnish
    • Greek
    • Hindi
    • Japanese
    • Korean
    • Persian
    • Swedish
    • Turkish
    • other →
 
Profile Documents Logout
Upload
Gabriela Guia Dwarfism
Gabriela Guia Dwarfism

...  Unfortunately not everyone is born healthy and ...
genetics problems
genetics problems

... 1. These problems deal with Mendelian genetic traits. Mendelian genetic traits are determined by a single gene locus with exactly two alleles. One allele is dominant and the other allele is recessive. 2. Dominant alleles are represented by capital letters. Recessive alleles are represented by lowerc ...
Evolution by leaps: gene duplication in bacteria | SpringerLink
Evolution by leaps: gene duplication in bacteria | SpringerLink

... characterization of sources of genetic variation. Evolution at the molecular level is now known to have taken place through both selection and neutral drift acting on genetic variation arising from many avenues: single base changes, horizontal transfer of genes, loss of genes, rearrangements of geno ...
ppt - Chair of Computational Biology
ppt - Chair of Computational Biology

... The number of candidates remains, however, exponential. 9. Lecture WS 2003/04 ...
BI321F12 Review Lecture 01 Model organisms etc
BI321F12 Review Lecture 01 Model organisms etc

... • Mendel assumed that the male and female gamete cell would combine at random, so, a given G or g male gamete would have an equal chance of fertilizing an G-bearing or an gbearing ovule. • First element of chance: the chance that a gamete is G vs. g. • Second element of chance: the random (with resp ...
genes, pseudogenes, deletions, insertion elements and DNA islands
genes, pseudogenes, deletions, insertion elements and DNA islands

... each species and between both species. The Opc protein family The opcA region of Ng strains FA1090 and MS11 contains an opcA-like gene (Fig. 1). Furthermore, an opcA-like gene is present in most Ng strains because we ampli®ed a product of the same size from 26 Ng strains using oligonucleotides O570 ...
Guidelines for Gene Expression Patterns papers
Guidelines for Gene Expression Patterns papers

... (1) Is this manuscript appropriate for MOD or for Gene Expression Patterns (GEP)? Does the ms. contain cloning and/or gene expression data? ...
Layer 2 - CRM activity
Layer 2 - CRM activity

... class. Again, the coverage of available data for gene activity is not complete, however it is already close to 45% of all Drosophila genes, so instead of treating them as hidden variables, we simply use only the set of genes for which we have expression data to estimate the model. In order to estima ...
Tutorial: RNA-Seq Analysis Part II (Tracks): Non-Specific
Tutorial: RNA-Seq Analysis Part II (Tracks): Non-Specific

... Figure 10: The dot in the scatter plot corresponding to the gene "Rps13" and the corresponding region in the trackm list "zoomed-to-selection". area showing the visible reads by grabbing at the bottom of the track's editor and dragging it downwards. You will get a view similar to that in figure 11. ...
Punnett Squares
Punnett Squares

... hemophilia but is a carrier and can pass the defective gene to offspring.  Hemophilia occurs in males who inherit only one copy of the defective gene ...
Gene Annotation Naming Guidelines
Gene Annotation Naming Guidelines

... the function of a sequence from other sequences. It is important to realize that we use an inexact method, that the guidelines described in this document cannot cover every possible combination of evidence, and that when the evidence for function is ambiguous, two annotators may come up with two dif ...
Cloning and characterization of CmGPD1, the Candida magnoliae
Cloning and characterization of CmGPD1, the Candida magnoliae

... well known that polyols are crucial to the osmoregulation of yeast as compatible solutes. When yeast cells are exposed to hyperosmotic stress, they accumulate one or more protective solutes such as glycerol, D-arabitol and mannitol. These polyols prevent the rapid diffusion of water from the cell in ...
Genomic disorders: structural features of the genome can lead to
Genomic disorders: structural features of the genome can lead to

Identification, characterization, and expression profiling of salt
Identification, characterization, and expression profiling of salt

... 1997). Three protein/protein complexes exist for this purpose: the plasma membrane (H+)-ATPase (P-ATPase) and two vacuolar transport systems, an (H+)-ATPase (V-ATPase), and a pyrophosphatase (PPiase). The plant P-ATPase is represented by a gene family with more than 10 members, encoding proteins of ...
Hox gene regulation by C. elegans sop-3
Hox gene regulation by C. elegans sop-3

... In particular, changes in the levels of MAB-5 and EGL-5 result in homeotic transformations of ray morphological identities that often result in ray fusions (Chow and Emmons, 1994). MAB-5 and EGL-5 are each expressed in specific subsets of the rays and are required for expression of the unique charac ...
E. coli
E. coli

... In order to introduce an oligo-histidine tail at the C-terminus of the light chain, additional site directed mutagenesis experiments with the plasmid encoding the single-chain Fv fragment were carried out. In the first approach, both ArgL114 and AlaL115 were changed to histidine residues and three a ...
2002/356Sant - Docenti.unina.it
2002/356Sant - Docenti.unina.it

... panel of markers was informative in 9/20 cases (45%); the subsequent analysis of the three extragenic polymorphisms increased the rate of informativity to 15/20 cases (75%; see Figure 1 for examples of linkage diagnosis). Although extragenic markers are more informative, the risk of recombination be ...
Sauk Prairie Veterinary Clinic, SC
Sauk Prairie Veterinary Clinic, SC

... decreased fertility in the breed. They have found that the defect is located on the FANCI (Fanconi anemia complementation-group I) gene. The defect, called Brachyspina Syndrome (BS), can manifest itself in more than one way. Some of these BS calves are born alive but are deformed and grow poorly. Th ...
Nucleotide sequence of the thioredoxin gene from
Nucleotide sequence of the thioredoxin gene from

... gene~ a 15-mer oligodeoxyribonucleotide was synthesized (Table 1) for use as a primer in the sequence analysis. The isolated 3-kb fragment was used as template in direct dideoxy sequence analysis after heat-induced strand separation. The mixed l#-mer oligodeoxyribonucleotide was utilized as primer t ...
Is targeted modification of cytokinin regulatory gene activity in Rapid
Is targeted modification of cytokinin regulatory gene activity in Rapid

... seed industry in New Zealand. As of 2011, seed producers in Canterbury, New Zealand, exported more than $33 m worth of seed from Brassica species (Hampton et al., 2012). However, there is a need to increase both seed quantity and/or quality. The plant hormone group, the cytokinins, regulates many st ...
iCLIP HeLa cells were UV crosslinked before lysing in lysis buffer
iCLIP HeLa cells were UV crosslinked before lysing in lysis buffer

... proceeding to further analysis. (iii) Control file with random placement of iCLIP reads on corresponding genes was generated 100 times. Each 5’UTR, 3’ UTR, and each intron is its own region; all remaining parts of the gene are its own region (these will be all exononic sequences corresponding to OR ...
PPT - Blumberg Lab
PPT - Blumberg Lab

... expression pattern (knock-in) • advantages – can generate a true loss-of-function alleles – precise control over integration sites – prescreening of ES cells for phenotypes possible – can also “knock in” genes • disadvantages – not trivial to set up – may not be possible to study dominant lethal phe ...
Supplementary Information 410 475
Supplementary Information 410 475

... Genetics Computer Group. (B) Percentages of similarity and percentages of identity (parentheses) between the various TSG sequences were obtained by alignment using the GAP program (Genetics Computer Group). The Drosophila melanogaster genome contains a gene product (CG12410) highly similar in sequen ...
Gene overexpression reveals alternative
Gene overexpression reveals alternative

... increase in GCN4 mRNA translation, coupled with an extensive protein synthesis shut down. However, both phenomena are independent of Gcn2 function (Tzamarias et al., 1989). In addition, the assimilation of GCN4 mRNA translational derepression in vitro, does not require the Gcn2 kinase (Krupitza and ...
The Case of the Cumbersome Chromosomes
The Case of the Cumbersome Chromosomes

... Martin and Mary Cumbersome have been married for three years, and have not yet had any children. They are concerned that one or both of them may be infertile, and have come to your genetic counseling clinic for consultation and advice. Most other forms of infertility have been ruled out, but cytogen ...
< 1 ... 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 ... 392 >

Gene nomenclature

Gene nomenclature is the scientific naming of genes, the units of heredity in living organisms. An international committee published recommendations for genetic symbols and nomenclature in 1957. The need to develop formal guidelines for human gene names and symbols was recognized in the 1960s and full guidelines were issued in 1979 (Edinburgh Human Genome Meeting). Several other species-specific research communities (e.g., Drosophila, mouse) have adopted nomenclature standards, as well, and have published them on the relevant model organism websites and in scientific journals, including the Trends in Genetics Genetic Nomenclature Guide. Scientists familiar with a particular gene family may work together to revise the nomenclature for the entire set of genes when new information becomes available. For many genes and their corresponding proteins, an assortment of alternate names is in use across the scientific literature and public biological databases, posing a challenge to effective organization and exchange of biological information. Standardization of nomenclature thus tries to achieve the benefits of vocabulary control and bibliographic control, although adherence is voluntary. The advent of the information age has brought gene ontology, which in some ways is a next step of gene nomenclature, because it aims to unify the representation of gene and gene product attributes across all species.Gene nomenclature and protein nomenclature are not separate endeavors; they are aspects of the same whole. Any name or symbol used for a protein can potentially also be used for the gene that encodes it, and vice versa. But owing to the nature of how science has developed (with knowledge being uncovered bit by bit over decades), proteins and their corresponding genes have not always been discovered simultaneously (and not always physiologically understood when discovered), which is the largest reason why protein and gene names do not always match, or why scientists tend to favor one symbol or name for the protein and another for the gene. Another reason is that many of the mechanisms of life are the same or very similar across species, genera, orders, and phyla, so that a given protein may be produced in many kinds of organisms; and thus scientists naturally often use the same symbol and name for a given protein in one species (for example, mice) as in another species (for example, humans). Regarding the first duality (same symbol and name for gene or protein), the context usually makes the sense clear to scientific readers, and the nomenclatural systems also provide for some specificity by using italic for a symbol when the gene is meant and plain (roman) for when the protein is meant. Regarding the second duality (a given protein is endogenous in many kinds of organisms), the nomenclatural systems also provide for at least human-versus-nonhuman specificity by using different capitalization, although scientists often ignore this distinction, given that it is often biologically irrelevant.Also owing to the nature of how scientific knowledge has unfolded, proteins and their corresponding genes often have several names and symbols that are synonymous. Some of the earlier ones may be deprecated in favor of newer ones, although such deprecation is voluntary. Some older names and symbols live on simply because they have been widely used in the scientific literature (including before the newer ones were coined) and are well established among users.
  • studyres.com © 2026
  • DMCA
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Report