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TSC2 - The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
TSC2 - The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

... THE UNIVERSITY of NORTH CAROLINA at CHAPEL HILL ...
Rare Genetic Diseases
Rare Genetic Diseases

... Let me go back a little bit more deeply to what I would call ‘from gene to therapy’ and the fundamental dogma postulated by Nobel prize Francis Crick: one gene ➙ one protein Normally, one gene leads to one protein, through the transcription of DNA into a messenger RNA molecule, which in turn transla ...
BioInformatics
BioInformatics

... My Project Previous Work  Senior Thesis ...
sperm
sperm

... released at the same time and each is fertilized. They grow side by side in the uterus. Because they are the result of two different ovum and sperm they are no more alike in terms of heredity than other siblings. They may be of opposite sexes. ...
Genetics and Human Malleability
Genetics and Human Malleability

... have been answered from prior animal experimentation: Can the new gene be inserted stably into the correct target cells? Will the new gene be expressed (that is, function) in the cells at an appropriate level? Will the new gene harm the cell or the animal? These criteria are very similar to those re ...
Risk Factors for Breast Cancer
Risk Factors for Breast Cancer

... Alcohol use -- Drinking more than 1 - 2 glasses of alcohol a day may increase your risk of breast cancer. Childbirth -- Women who have never had children or who had them only after age 30 have an increased risk of breast cancer. Being pregnant more than once or becoming pregnant at an early age redu ...
Chapter 7 - HCC Learning Web
Chapter 7 - HCC Learning Web

... Categories of mutations 1) Point mutation – addition, deletion, or substitution of a few bases 2) Missense mutation – causes change in a single amino acid 3) Nonsense mutation – changes a normal codon into a stop codon 4) Silent mutation – alters a base but does not change the amino acid 5) Back-mu ...
Review: RECOMB Satellite Workshop on Regulatory Genomics
Review: RECOMB Satellite Workshop on Regulatory Genomics

... and then only doles them out to a relatively narrow bunch of people who have enough money to pay for them..solely to promote the financial health of the ...
Document
Document

... community is gibberish in another. Contributions by one research community may not be recognized by others. • Without coordination, research work may be duplicated. • The goal of the Gene Ontology Consortium is to produce a controlled vocabulary that can be applied to all eukaryotes even as knowledg ...
Activation of p53 and the pro-apoptotic p53 target gene PUMA
Activation of p53 and the pro-apoptotic p53 target gene PUMA

... The pathogenesis of non-glutamatergic, depolarization-induced cell death is still enigmatic. Recently, we have shown that veratridine induces apoptosis in chromaffin cells, and we have demonstrated protective effects of antioxidants in this system, suggesting a role for Na+ channels and oxidative st ...
HGSS2 DCGs (Graduate)
HGSS2 DCGs (Graduate)

... The transgene consists of the human APP gene containing a mutation causing a rare form of early-onset familial Alzheimer's disease (Val717Phe). The transgene, whose expression is driven by the platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) promoter, is microinjected into mouse eggs and implanted in a pseudop ...
Genetics - PCB 3063
Genetics - PCB 3063

... • In B. subtilis, the trp operon mRNA is also controlled by attenuation. – However, it does not involve ribosome binding. – Instead, there is a protein called TRAP (trp RNA binding attenuation protein) that binds the leader of the trp mRNA. – TRAP binds Trp (11 molecules) and then binds the leader, ...
Study Guide for Test on Chapter 11 and 14-1, 14-2
Study Guide for Test on Chapter 11 and 14-1, 14-2

... o Describe what happens during each phase of meiosis I and meiosis II  Focus on what happens to the chromosomes  Know when tetrad formation and crossing-over occurs o Distinguish among the type and number of gametes formed in males vs. in females  Know how many sperm, eggs, and polar bodies are f ...
Gene expression
Gene expression

... • What do you think it means to say “express a gene”? – Gene expression- The process by which information in a gene is used to create the protein that it codes for. ...
From Gene to Protein
From Gene to Protein

... function as enzymes and can splice RNA.   The discovery of ribozymes rendered obsolete the belief that all biological catalysts were proteins.   Three properties of RNA enable it to function as an enzyme: ...
Topic 6: Genetics Page 1
Topic 6: Genetics Page 1

Allele - Mr Waring`s Biology Blog
Allele - Mr Waring`s Biology Blog

... Total number of alleles in a particular population at a specific time Gene pool Condition in which the alleles of a particular gene are identical Homozygous Term used to describe a gene that has more than two possible alleles Multiple Alleles A term applied to an allele that is always expressed in t ...
Lokiarchaeota: Biologists Discover `Missing Link` Microorganism
Lokiarchaeota: Biologists Discover `Missing Link` Microorganism

... separating them from bacteria as well as from eukaryotes. They proposed that life can be divided into three domains: Eukaryota, Eubacteria, and Archaebacteria. Despite that archaeal cells were simple and small like bacteria, scientists found that Archaea were more closely related to organisms with c ...
17 Meiosis-S-14-signed
17 Meiosis-S-14-signed

... When homologous chromosome pairs align on the spindle during metaphase I the orientation of one pair is independent of the orientation of any other pair. This is known as independent assortment. Humans have 46 chromosomes, arranged as 23 pairs. During metaphase I each pair lines up independently, wh ...
Meiosis - River Dell Regional School District
Meiosis - River Dell Regional School District

... When homologous chromosome pairs align on the spindle during metaphase I the orientation of one pair is independent of the orientation of any other pair. This is known as independent assortment. Humans have 46 chromosomes, arranged as 23 pairs. During metaphase I each pair lines up independently, wh ...
2.1 12 Using genetic diagrams – 2
2.1 12 Using genetic diagrams – 2

Meiosis - cloudfront.net
Meiosis - cloudfront.net

Document
Document

... Yeast two-hybrid system: a genetic assay for detecting protein-protein interactions Regulation of gene expression in yeast ...
The Cell*Cells are the fundamental unit of life, composed of a variety
The Cell*Cells are the fundamental unit of life, composed of a variety

... b. homologous structures – p384 structures that have different mature forms but develop from the same embryonic tissues. Homologous structures provide strong evidence that all four-limbed vertebrates have descended, with modifications, from common ancestors c. vestigial structures – p384 organs that ...
Tutorial_12 (2014)
Tutorial_12 (2014)

... • BLAT on DNA is designed to quickly find sequences of 95% and greater similarity of length 25 bases or more. • BLAT is not BLAST. DNA BLAT works by keeping an index of the entire genome in memory. The index consists of all overlapping 11-mers stepping by 5. • Protein BLAT works in a similar manner ...
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NEDD9

Neural precursor cell expressed developmentally down-regulated protein 9 (NEDD-9) is a protein that in humans is encoded by the NEDD9 gene. NEDD-9 is also known as enhancer of filamentation 1 (EF1), CRK-associated substrate-related protein (CAS-L), and Cas scaffolding protein family member 2 (CASS2). An important paralog of this gene is BCAR1.
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