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Gene Section POU1F1 (POU class 1 homeobox 1) in Oncology and Haematology
Gene Section POU1F1 (POU class 1 homeobox 1) in Oncology and Haematology

... POU1F1 mutations have been described to date (Cushman et al., 2002; Dattani, 2005). The molecular mechanisms underlying their effects can be dominant inhibition of transcription or inability to bind to DNA. The R271W mutation is the most commonly occurring POU1F1 gene defect (Radovick et al., 1992). ...
Unit: 2
Unit: 2

... 7. What is cellular respiration? What organisms use it to get energy? 8. What are the 3 basic steps of cellular respiration? Where does each occur? What is made at each step? How much ATP is produced at each step? 9. What is the chemical equation for photosynthesis? 10. What is the chemical equation ...
M220 Lecture 14 - Napa Valley College
M220 Lecture 14 - Napa Valley College

... Note that when bacterial cells are exposed to U.V. radiation adjacent thymines are unnaturally bonded to create thymine-thymine dimers (or just thymine dimers). To combat the effect of the U.V. light, many species possess an enzyme induced by visible light which will cleave or break the covalent bon ...
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... - Cortactin A: regulates actin polymerization - Focal Adhesion Kinase: involved in cell-matrix ...
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8 Cell Division

... occur? How often is the average cell actively engaged in mitosis? What type of cell begins mitosis, and what are the products of this process? 5. Describe the four phases of mitosis. What cellular events occur in each phase? 6. Which phase is cytokinesis most closely associated with? What is cytokin ...
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... A gene is a segment of DNA that codes for RNA and protein. A single molecule of DNA has thousands of genes lined up like the cars of a train. When genes are being used, the strand of DNA is stretched out so that the information it contains can be decoded and used to direct the synthesis of proteins ...
userfiles/1290/Genetics Review Sheet - Answer Key
userfiles/1290/Genetics Review Sheet - Answer Key

... the genotype________________. We show it by using __CAPITAL__ letters. Recessive gene – The trait that will show up only when _it is the only allele present (no dominant allele to “take over). We show it by using _lowercase_letters. Answer: Where do an organism’s traits come from? Directly from _par ...
Noushin Farnoud Presentation
Noushin Farnoud Presentation

... • Identified many uncharacterized genes with essential cellular roles (e.g, HDC14318 with z=6.8 and 7.3). • Identified uncharacterized genes with phenotypes quantitatively similar to that of DIAP1 (z score 5). Examples: CG11700, a ubiquitin-like gene, and CG15455, a gene encoding an AML1-like transc ...
Review Session for Second Midterm
Review Session for Second Midterm

... DSCAM is a self-adhesive molecule but its signaling induces a repulsive interaction. This interaction is involved in branching of axons, as only those with the same isoform can bind and repel each other. Different axons express different forms of DSCAM (which cannot bind and cannot repel itself), al ...
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... Each organism has a characteristic number of chromosomes, usually found in ...
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Solid Tumour Section t(1;22)(q23;q12) in myoepithelioma Atlas of Genetics and Cytogenetics

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Biotech 101 is in Session …… Take your seats …………

... Edible Vaccines Introduce antigenic proteins from disease-causing organisms into plants. Eating the fruit or vegetable can then induce antibodies just like a vaccination, rendering the person immune to the disease. The feasibility of this approach has already been demonstrated. Dr. Charles Arntzen ...
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Hippo pathway

...  Its key signaling component — the protein kinase Hippo (Hpo).  Mutations in this gene lead to tissue overgrowth, or “hippopotamus”-like phenotype ...
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... In all human and murine tissues tested, a about 2 kb transcript was observed by Northern blot hybridization, suggesting that glomulin expression is ubiquitous. This could be due to the presence of glomulin-expressing blood vessels in the various tissues analysed. By in situ hybridisation on murine e ...
Protein Synthesis SG
Protein Synthesis SG

... 25. Describe the lytic and lysogenic infection cycles. Compare & contrast how they allow viruses to spread. 26. Describe the life cycle of a retrovirus. 27. Describe the basic concept of the operon, including the role of each of the following: promoter, regulatory gene, operator, genes, repressor 28 ...
Biology—Midterm Study Guide
Biology—Midterm Study Guide

... 44. Eye color and height in humans is the result of _____ inheritance. Polygenic 45. When Mendel crossed a true-breeding pea plant with yellow seeds with a true-breeding pea plant with green seeds all the offspring were yellow. Which trait is dominant? Yellow 46. A pea plant with the genotype TT has ...
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... c. YAC ( but I also count d and e as good answers) d. BAC e. PAC 11. The yeast-two-hybrid system is used to study: a. transcription initiation b. translation c. protein-protein interaction d. mRNA e. none of the above 12. Microarrays are used for the analysis of: a. genomic sequence b. transcriptome ...
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The plant cell that is responsible for asexual reproduction is called

... the plant is called the ________ and the male part of the plant is called the __________. ...
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AQA Biology Question number Answer Marks Guidance 1 a i (In all

... low oxygen conditions 5 This prevents p53 being produced/p53 gene being expressed/transcribed 6 Removal of acetyl groups (by HDAC) prevents transcription (of p53 gene) 7 So not enough p53 protein/expression to stop tumour growth ...
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Study Guide for Exam 3 Dr. Osborne

... The blastula folds inward to produce the gastrula--this is about when the embryo implants a. The outer layer of the gastrula is the ectoderm b. The inner layer of the gastrula is the endoderm ...
Supplementary Data
Supplementary Data

... The following human cell lines were obtained from the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC): pancreatic carcinoma (AsPC-1), cervical cancer (HeLa), prostate carcinoma (DU-145, PC3, LNCaP), lung carcinoma (NCI-H460, A549), breast cancer (MDA468), hepatocellular liver carcinoma (HepG2) and epithelia ...
Biology Notebook Semester Two
Biology Notebook Semester Two

...  Strands of DNA  Every organism has a specific number of chromosomes.  Before cell division occurs, DNA must be copied so each new cell will have DNA.  Once copied, the two identical stands (or Chromatids) are held together by ...
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G 1

... – Ensures each gamete receives one complete haploid (1n) set of chromosomes – Homologous chromosomes are paired with one homologue originating from the maternal parent and one from the paternal parent. Orientation of the chromosome pairs is random with respect to the cell ...
Document
Document

... C15. One advantage of the uptake of DNA is that it could be used as a nutritional source. The bacterial cells could use the nucleotides for their own growth and metabolism. The integration of DNA into the bacterial chromosome (i.e., transformation) has the advantage of possibly giving the bacterium ...
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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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