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Jeffreys - OldForensics 2012-2013
Jeffreys - OldForensics 2012-2013

... techniques those of which are commonly used today for police and detective work, paternity tests, and immigration issues ...
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Site-specific recombination mechanisms exploit DNA
Site-specific recombination mechanisms exploit DNA

... bacteriophage (Mu) changes its host range through expression of different tail fibers by changing the orientation of a specific DNA segment, the G segment, in its genome1. The phage-encoded Gin recombinase protein specifically recombined the G segment located between short inverted DNA sequences, bu ...
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DNA, Genes & Genomes

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... disease, this knowledge can be exploited to help develop drugs which change gene expression profiles. Unlike the genome which is largely static, the epigenome is more dynamic and we have more influence over it. Since epigenetic modifications are reversible, it is possible that cells which show abnor ...
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... The storage of genetic information in DNA, the use of an RNA intermediate that is read in three letter words, and the mechanism of protein synthesis are essentially the same in all ...
Biology 303 EXAM II 3/14/00 NAME
Biology 303 EXAM II 3/14/00 NAME

... What modification neutralizes the charges on histones and loosens up the interactions between histones and DNA? A. phosphorylation B. methylation C. acetylation D. polyadenylation ...
Frontiers of Genetics
Frontiers of Genetics

... species, into a single DNA molecule • Bacteria have small circular pieces of DNA called plasmids separate from their larger single chromosome • Plasmids can replicate and pass between bacterial cells allowing gene sharing – associated with antibacterial resistance ...
DNA Mutations
DNA Mutations

... • DNA controls structure and function of cells because it holds the code to build all proteins. ...
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genome

... answered easily. Planners suggest developing a human genome database analogous to model organism databases with links to phenotypic information. Also needed are databases and analytical tools for the expanding body of gene expression and function data, for modeling complex biological networks and in ...
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Sc9 - a 3.1(teacher notes)

... These variations in forms are called alleles. The ultimate combination of the chromosome pair is what makes the variation possible - combining the different variations of different characteristics to create a unique variation. ...
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Chapter 13 Genetic Engineering Changing the living world

... Plasmids are found naturally in some bacteria and have been very useful for DNA transfer. Why? The plasmid has a genetic “marker”... a gene to distinguish which bacteria carry the foreign DNA. How? ...
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The process represented in the diagram below occurs in many cells

... Base  your  answers  to  questions  83  through  85  on  the  chart  below  and  on  your  knowledge  of  biology.  The   DNA  Sequences  chart  shows  a  portion  of  the  code  for  insulin  in  humans  and  cows.  These  DNA ...
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Chapter 1 Answers

... 1. Why does the DNA need to change periodically from a long, double-helix chromatin molecule into a tightly wound-up chromosome? What does it do at each stage that it cannot do at the other? When the DNA is an open chromatin molecule, portions of it are actively being transcribed by mRNA. The cell w ...
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Translation - CS

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GE & Profiling iQuiz

... artificially alter the genetic information in the chromosome of an organism? Gene therapy ...
Gel Electrophoresis
Gel Electrophoresis

... * Using GE, one can compare sizes of DNA fragments, and ...
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Review for Molecular Genetics Quest

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advances_in_geneticsppt

Know your molecules organizer
Know your molecules organizer

... Short fragments made when the lagging strand is copied during replication Adds segments to the ends of chromosomes to prevent shortening during replication Recognizes splice sites and combines with proteins to form spliceosomes RNA molecules that function as enzymes Editing complex containing “snurp ...
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Oswald Avery Colin MacLeod Maclyn McCarty 1928

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DNA Structure, Replication and Protein Synthesis
DNA Structure, Replication and Protein Synthesis

... A section of DNA that causes the production of a protein is called a ___________________. Sections of  DNA that do not code for a particular protein are called _____________________________. The  protein _______________________________ is responsible for holding the DNA in its highly coiled  state.  ...
Know your molecules #2
Know your molecules #2

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DNA Replication vs protein synthesis and transcription vs translation

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Non-coding DNA

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