第二週
... • In 1986 the California condor had declined to only 27 individuals. Since then over 150 condors have been bred and 88 released back into the wild. What genetic problems do you think might be encountered in trying to reestablish this population in nature? ...
... • In 1986 the California condor had declined to only 27 individuals. Since then over 150 condors have been bred and 88 released back into the wild. What genetic problems do you think might be encountered in trying to reestablish this population in nature? ...
"Using the KEGG Database Resource". In: Current Protocols in
... see Basic Protocols 7 to 9) consists of a precomputed database of all-versus-all SmithWaterman similarity scores among all genes in KEGG GENES, enabling relationships between homologs to be easily visualized on the pathway and genome maps or viewed as clusters of orthologous genes. The KEGG EXPRESSI ...
... see Basic Protocols 7 to 9) consists of a precomputed database of all-versus-all SmithWaterman similarity scores among all genes in KEGG GENES, enabling relationships between homologs to be easily visualized on the pathway and genome maps or viewed as clusters of orthologous genes. The KEGG EXPRESSI ...
Biotechnology Explorer™ GMO Investigator™ Kit: A - Bio-Rad
... Conventional PCR does well to detect the presence of the DNA that the primer pair targets. Conventional PCR detects the amplified product (amplicon) by an end-point analysis — running the DNA on an agarose gel after the reactions are completed. If the target DNA sequence is not there, no amplicon wi ...
... Conventional PCR does well to detect the presence of the DNA that the primer pair targets. Conventional PCR detects the amplified product (amplicon) by an end-point analysis — running the DNA on an agarose gel after the reactions are completed. If the target DNA sequence is not there, no amplicon wi ...
Folie 1 - NETTAB
... Hospital Bonn participated in the Boston Children’s Hospital’s CLARITY challenge. ...
... Hospital Bonn participated in the Boston Children’s Hospital’s CLARITY challenge. ...
Gene Ontology (GO) Tutorial
... Trying some GO tools that extend the use of the GO from an annotation resource to a research/analysis tool. So far, you have explored the use of the GO as a common resource for annotation of gene products for different organisms. It is also possible to use the GO as a research analysis tool by exami ...
... Trying some GO tools that extend the use of the GO from an annotation resource to a research/analysis tool. So far, you have explored the use of the GO as a common resource for annotation of gene products for different organisms. It is also possible to use the GO as a research analysis tool by exami ...
List of references - UC Davis Plant Sciences
... Agrobacterium transient expression system as a tool for the isolation of disease resistance genes: application to the Rx2 locus in potato. The Plant J. 21:73-81. Birhman RK and K.Hosaka 2000. Production of inbred progenies of diploid potatoes using the S locus inhibitor (Sli) gene, and their charact ...
... Agrobacterium transient expression system as a tool for the isolation of disease resistance genes: application to the Rx2 locus in potato. The Plant J. 21:73-81. Birhman RK and K.Hosaka 2000. Production of inbred progenies of diploid potatoes using the S locus inhibitor (Sli) gene, and their charact ...
to view
... 7) All papaya and date palm plants produce flowers yet only few papaya and date palm seen to produce fruit. What could be the possible reason for the rest not producing them? Ans.Papaya and date are dioecious plants. 8) Often the number of male gametes produced in an organism is in large number as ...
... 7) All papaya and date palm plants produce flowers yet only few papaya and date palm seen to produce fruit. What could be the possible reason for the rest not producing them? Ans.Papaya and date are dioecious plants. 8) Often the number of male gametes produced in an organism is in large number as ...
Identity elements in tRNA-mediated transcription
... and the anticodon arm of tRNATrp, whereas another stretch of 18 nt is complementary to the T-arm. Moreover, parts of the latter sequence are repeated several times upstream of the 18 nt sequence in stem–loop structure II of the trp leader (Fig. 1). This large extent of mRNA–tRNA complementarity sugg ...
... and the anticodon arm of tRNATrp, whereas another stretch of 18 nt is complementary to the T-arm. Moreover, parts of the latter sequence are repeated several times upstream of the 18 nt sequence in stem–loop structure II of the trp leader (Fig. 1). This large extent of mRNA–tRNA complementarity sugg ...
Identity elements in tRNA-mediated transcription
... and the anticodon arm of tRNATrp, whereas another stretch of 18 nt is complementary to the T-arm. Moreover, parts of the latter sequence are repeated several times upstream of the 18 nt sequence in stem–loop structure II of the trp leader (Fig. 1). This large extent of mRNA–tRNA complementarity sugg ...
... and the anticodon arm of tRNATrp, whereas another stretch of 18 nt is complementary to the T-arm. Moreover, parts of the latter sequence are repeated several times upstream of the 18 nt sequence in stem–loop structure II of the trp leader (Fig. 1). This large extent of mRNA–tRNA complementarity sugg ...
Tracing the Thread of Plastid Diversity through the Tapestry of Life
... and must be targeted to the plastid. Three mechanisms underlie this reduction of the plastid genome; gene loss, substitution, and transfer. First, in the case of gene loss, genes that no longer confer a selective advantage in the endosymbiotic environment may be lost outright. A probable example of ...
... and must be targeted to the plastid. Three mechanisms underlie this reduction of the plastid genome; gene loss, substitution, and transfer. First, in the case of gene loss, genes that no longer confer a selective advantage in the endosymbiotic environment may be lost outright. A probable example of ...
Standard PDF - Wiley Online Library
... in size from 0.35 to 0.61 Mb. The bands in mouse, rat, human, and ferret P. carinii sum to 6.5, 7.0, 7.7, and 11 Mb, respectively. Thus, the genomes of P. carinii from di¡erent hosts appear to di¡er in size by as much as 1.7-fold. Such large di¡erences in genome size seem di¤cult to reconcile with t ...
... in size from 0.35 to 0.61 Mb. The bands in mouse, rat, human, and ferret P. carinii sum to 6.5, 7.0, 7.7, and 11 Mb, respectively. Thus, the genomes of P. carinii from di¡erent hosts appear to di¡er in size by as much as 1.7-fold. Such large di¡erences in genome size seem di¤cult to reconcile with t ...
The enhancement of ribosomal transcription by the recycling of RNA
... then no longer depend solely on random collisions between the promoter or the spacer enhancer elements and the polymerase. Thus, yet a further mechanism to enhance the rate of ribosomal transcription may occur. Recycling of transcription factors could function either through release of the polymeras ...
... then no longer depend solely on random collisions between the promoter or the spacer enhancer elements and the polymerase. Thus, yet a further mechanism to enhance the rate of ribosomal transcription may occur. Recycling of transcription factors could function either through release of the polymeras ...
Comparative gene mapping in Arabidopsis lyrata chromosomes 6
... them at intervals of about 1 Mbp, plus one gene from the region studied by Hagenblad & Nordborg (2002) ; two of these, At4g20410 and At4g22720, are located near the S-locus. To determine chromosome rearrangements near the centromere region on the short arm, we added genes close to the centromere, tw ...
... them at intervals of about 1 Mbp, plus one gene from the region studied by Hagenblad & Nordborg (2002) ; two of these, At4g20410 and At4g22720, are located near the S-locus. To determine chromosome rearrangements near the centromere region on the short arm, we added genes close to the centromere, tw ...
Distribution and structural variation of the she pathogenicity island in
... coli (EHEC), enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC), enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC), Yersinia enterocolitica and Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium. The study showed that the she PAI has undergone a variety of structural changes, de®ned by the presence or absence of speci®c marker genes in the PAI. The ...
... coli (EHEC), enteropathogenic E. coli (EPEC), enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC), Yersinia enterocolitica and Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium. The study showed that the she PAI has undergone a variety of structural changes, de®ned by the presence or absence of speci®c marker genes in the PAI. The ...
of Lactobacillus pentosus
... al., 1991, Scheler et al., 1991, Sizemore et al., 1991). In these organisms, inactivation of xylR led to constitutive expression of xylAB (Rygus et al., 1991, Scheler et al., 1991, Sizemore et al., 1992, Gürtner et al., 1992). The xyl operator has been identified just downstream of the xylAB promote ...
... al., 1991, Scheler et al., 1991, Sizemore et al., 1991). In these organisms, inactivation of xylR led to constitutive expression of xylAB (Rygus et al., 1991, Scheler et al., 1991, Sizemore et al., 1992, Gürtner et al., 1992). The xyl operator has been identified just downstream of the xylAB promote ...
Pleiotropic effects of the mouse lethal yellow (Ay) mutation
... al., 1993). For most agouti genotypes, agouti RNA is expressed only in the skin during the time of phaeomelanin synthesis. However, Ay is associated with the ubiquitous expression of a chimeric RNA that fuses a novel 5′ end, ‘exon 1Ay’, to agouti-coding sequences at its 3′ end (Miller et al., 1993). ...
... al., 1993). For most agouti genotypes, agouti RNA is expressed only in the skin during the time of phaeomelanin synthesis. However, Ay is associated with the ubiquitous expression of a chimeric RNA that fuses a novel 5′ end, ‘exon 1Ay’, to agouti-coding sequences at its 3′ end (Miller et al., 1993). ...
Xq28 duplications
... inactive X chromosome inherited from the father, while other cells may have an inactive X chromosome inherited from the mother. ...
... inactive X chromosome inherited from the father, while other cells may have an inactive X chromosome inherited from the mother. ...
9th Grade Physical Science Course Syllabus
... Solve word problems involving the frequency of genes in a population. Define the term microevolution. Define genetic drift. Explain how it contributes to microevolution. Define and explain bottleneck effect and founder effect. Describe how gene flow, mutation, nonrandom mating and natural selection ...
... Solve word problems involving the frequency of genes in a population. Define the term microevolution. Define genetic drift. Explain how it contributes to microevolution. Define and explain bottleneck effect and founder effect. Describe how gene flow, mutation, nonrandom mating and natural selection ...
Product description P003-D1 MLH1-MSH2-v01 - MRC
... independently collected secondary DNA sample can exclude these kinds of contamination artefacts. Normal copy number variation in healthy individuals is described in the database of genomic variants: http://dgv.tcag.ca/dgv/app/home. Users should always consult the latest update of the database and sc ...
... independently collected secondary DNA sample can exclude these kinds of contamination artefacts. Normal copy number variation in healthy individuals is described in the database of genomic variants: http://dgv.tcag.ca/dgv/app/home. Users should always consult the latest update of the database and sc ...
Package `biomartr`
... Description Perform metagenomic data retrieval and functional annotation retrieval. In detail, this package aims to provide users with a standardized way to automate genome, proteome, coding sequence ('CDS'), 'GFF', and metagenome retrieval from 'NCBI' and 'ENSEMBL' databases. Furthermore, an interf ...
... Description Perform metagenomic data retrieval and functional annotation retrieval. In detail, this package aims to provide users with a standardized way to automate genome, proteome, coding sequence ('CDS'), 'GFF', and metagenome retrieval from 'NCBI' and 'ENSEMBL' databases. Furthermore, an interf ...
Genotype C of hepatitis B virus can be classified into at least two
... with and virulence of the virus. In particular, examination of sequence diversity among different isolates of the virus is important since variants may differ in their patterns of serological reactivity, replication of the virus, activity of liver disease, prognosis and response to treatment. In fac ...
... with and virulence of the virus. In particular, examination of sequence diversity among different isolates of the virus is important since variants may differ in their patterns of serological reactivity, replication of the virus, activity of liver disease, prognosis and response to treatment. In fac ...
NCBI Molecular Biology Resources
... NM_000547: variant 1 COMMENT REVIEWED REFSEQ: This record has been curated by NCBI staff. The reference sequence was derived from M17755.2 and AW874082.1. On Feb 25, 2003 this sequence version replaced gi:21361188. ...
... NM_000547: variant 1 COMMENT REVIEWED REFSEQ: This record has been curated by NCBI staff. The reference sequence was derived from M17755.2 and AW874082.1. On Feb 25, 2003 this sequence version replaced gi:21361188. ...
Website
... matches and 1 or 2 mismatches Array Size: Effect of low fidelity can be decreased with longer l-mers, but array size increases exponentially in l. Array size is limited with current technology. Practicality: SBH is still impractical. As DNA microarray technology improves, SBH may become practical in ...
... matches and 1 or 2 mismatches Array Size: Effect of low fidelity can be decreased with longer l-mers, but array size increases exponentially in l. Array size is limited with current technology. Practicality: SBH is still impractical. As DNA microarray technology improves, SBH may become practical in ...
Help Me Understand Genetics
... DNA, or deoxyribonucleic acid, is the hereditary material in humans and almost all other organisms. Nearly every cell in a person’s body has the same DNA. Most DNA is located in the cell nucleus (where it is called nuclear DNA), but a small amount of DNA can also be found in the mitochondria (where ...
... DNA, or deoxyribonucleic acid, is the hereditary material in humans and almost all other organisms. Nearly every cell in a person’s body has the same DNA. Most DNA is located in the cell nucleus (where it is called nuclear DNA), but a small amount of DNA can also be found in the mitochondria (where ...
DNA sequencing: graph theory
... matches and 1 or 2 mismatches • Array Size: Effect of low fidelity can be decreased with longer l-mers, but array size increases exponentially in l. Array size is limited with current technology. • Practicality: SBH is still impractical. As DNA microarray technology improves, SBH may become practica ...
... matches and 1 or 2 mismatches • Array Size: Effect of low fidelity can be decreased with longer l-mers, but array size increases exponentially in l. Array size is limited with current technology. • Practicality: SBH is still impractical. As DNA microarray technology improves, SBH may become practica ...