Sequences of flavivirus-related RNA viruses persist in DNA form
... to amplify the NS3 region of flaviviruses and a direct PCR protocol (without a reverse transcription step), we obtained repeatedly positive amplification results from DNA extracts of uninfected cultured C6/36 Aedes albopictus cells. Negative results were constantly obtained in similar conditions usi ...
... to amplify the NS3 region of flaviviruses and a direct PCR protocol (without a reverse transcription step), we obtained repeatedly positive amplification results from DNA extracts of uninfected cultured C6/36 Aedes albopictus cells. Negative results were constantly obtained in similar conditions usi ...
Abundance of an mRNA is the average number of molecules per cell
... Condensation reaction is one in which a covalent bond is formed with loss of a water molecule, as in the addition of an amino acid to a polypeptide chain. Conditional lethal mlutations kill a cell or virus under certain (nonpermissive) conditions, but allow it to survive under other (permissive) con ...
... Condensation reaction is one in which a covalent bond is formed with loss of a water molecule, as in the addition of an amino acid to a polypeptide chain. Conditional lethal mlutations kill a cell or virus under certain (nonpermissive) conditions, but allow it to survive under other (permissive) con ...
Plant Genome Resources at the National Center for Biotechnology
... gov/mapview/), used to display genomic maps for many plant and animal genomes, takes advantage of the same database technology as Entrez and supports text queries with Boolean logic. Searches of complete genomic sequences from organisms ranging from microbes to higher plants and animals may be perfo ...
... gov/mapview/), used to display genomic maps for many plant and animal genomes, takes advantage of the same database technology as Entrez and supports text queries with Boolean logic. Searches of complete genomic sequences from organisms ranging from microbes to higher plants and animals may be perfo ...
REVIEW Pathways to understanding the extended phenotype of
... The behavioral manipulation is adaptive to the fungus, which cannot grow or transmit inside the colony. It is not an altruistic act by the dying ant that serves to reduce infection to kin, because the death of the ant outside the colony leads to spore transmission to kin when they forage (Andersen e ...
... The behavioral manipulation is adaptive to the fungus, which cannot grow or transmit inside the colony. It is not an altruistic act by the dying ant that serves to reduce infection to kin, because the death of the ant outside the colony leads to spore transmission to kin when they forage (Andersen e ...
Full-Text PDF
... According to the soil type classification, soils consists mainly of sand, silt, and clay that are often mixed. Clay minerals are natural fine-grained phyllosilicates that might occur in soils. Thus, only soils with a high amount of clay minerals or soils with a defined small grain size are defined a ...
... According to the soil type classification, soils consists mainly of sand, silt, and clay that are often mixed. Clay minerals are natural fine-grained phyllosilicates that might occur in soils. Thus, only soils with a high amount of clay minerals or soils with a defined small grain size are defined a ...
CHAPTER 10 TEST REVIEW - Hudson City School District
... • When it replicates one parental strand and one new strand goes to each daughter cell. ...
... • When it replicates one parental strand and one new strand goes to each daughter cell. ...
Lab 1 Artificial Selection The purpose of a particular investigation
... amplicillin resistance. Using restriction enzymes and DNA ligase, she forms a recombinant plasmid containing both genes. She then adds a high concentration of the plasmid to a tube of the bacteria in a medium for bacterial growth that contains glucose as the only energy source. This tube (+) and a c ...
... amplicillin resistance. Using restriction enzymes and DNA ligase, she forms a recombinant plasmid containing both genes. She then adds a high concentration of the plasmid to a tube of the bacteria in a medium for bacterial growth that contains glucose as the only energy source. This tube (+) and a c ...
Saccharomyces Genome Database (SGD) provides secondary gene annotation using the Gene Ontology (GO).
... genes to GO will allow users to find all genes, including those across species, which share the same (or related) annotation(s) for function, process and component. GO consists of three ontologies, representing the fundamental aspects of gene products: molecular function, biological process and cell ...
... genes to GO will allow users to find all genes, including those across species, which share the same (or related) annotation(s) for function, process and component. GO consists of three ontologies, representing the fundamental aspects of gene products: molecular function, biological process and cell ...
DNA Keychains: Spell Your Initials Using the Genetic Code!!!!! This
... certain amino acid. In this case, each codon will represent a letter in your name or initials! The Genetic Code actually has more than one codon for most amino acids because there are only ...
... certain amino acid. In this case, each codon will represent a letter in your name or initials! The Genetic Code actually has more than one codon for most amino acids because there are only ...
Master student project in the DeNeWa framework
... In the framework of the DeNeWa project Extended Spectrum Beta-Lactamases (ESBL)producing Enterobacteriaceae (with focus on ESBL Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae) are collected from different wastewater streams of the hospital in Sneek. ESBLs are β-lactamases which are formed as a result of ...
... In the framework of the DeNeWa project Extended Spectrum Beta-Lactamases (ESBL)producing Enterobacteriaceae (with focus on ESBL Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae) are collected from different wastewater streams of the hospital in Sneek. ESBLs are β-lactamases which are formed as a result of ...
Imprinted green beards: a little less than kin and more than kind
... Figure 1. The mesiRNA ratchet. A population initially fixed for allele A (upper left) is successively invaded by an allele A 0 that also encodes a mesiRNA; an allele A8 that retains the mesiRNA but is insensitive to its effects and an allele A* that encodes a new mesiRNA (lower right). Subscripts m ...
... Figure 1. The mesiRNA ratchet. A population initially fixed for allele A (upper left) is successively invaded by an allele A 0 that also encodes a mesiRNA; an allele A8 that retains the mesiRNA but is insensitive to its effects and an allele A* that encodes a new mesiRNA (lower right). Subscripts m ...
- ResearchOnline@JCU
... polyps in the colon and rectum of serrated histology. WHO clinical criteria1 are the presence of 420 serrated polyps throughout the colon, or 45 proximal to the rectum. Serrated polyps, particularly large sessile polyps in the proximal colon, frequently exhibit the oncogenic V600E mutation together ...
... polyps in the colon and rectum of serrated histology. WHO clinical criteria1 are the presence of 420 serrated polyps throughout the colon, or 45 proximal to the rectum. Serrated polyps, particularly large sessile polyps in the proximal colon, frequently exhibit the oncogenic V600E mutation together ...
this PDF file - Journal of Big History
... Parts three and four denote a slight change in content; whereas Mukherjee continues to focus on the development of human understanding, but he does so through the detailed analysis of two transformative technologies from the 1970s: gene sequencing and gene cloning. By emphasizing these specific tech ...
... Parts three and four denote a slight change in content; whereas Mukherjee continues to focus on the development of human understanding, but he does so through the detailed analysis of two transformative technologies from the 1970s: gene sequencing and gene cloning. By emphasizing these specific tech ...
Chapter 12
... Every enzyme/protein we discover is a new tool for scientists to use in the lab to manipulate DNA. DNA ligase was discovered when investigating DNA replication, but now we use it as a “glue” when subcloning genes into vectors. Now what should we do with this vector containing our gene or inte ...
... Every enzyme/protein we discover is a new tool for scientists to use in the lab to manipulate DNA. DNA ligase was discovered when investigating DNA replication, but now we use it as a “glue” when subcloning genes into vectors. Now what should we do with this vector containing our gene or inte ...
Genes without frontiers?
... Ochman et al, 2000; Gogarten et al, 2002). This evolution need not be slow. The intense selection pressure imposed on microbial communities by worldwide antibiotic use reveals that new multiresistance plasmids can arise from diverse origins and spread in less than five decades (Hartl and Dykhuizen, ...
... Ochman et al, 2000; Gogarten et al, 2002). This evolution need not be slow. The intense selection pressure imposed on microbial communities by worldwide antibiotic use reveals that new multiresistance plasmids can arise from diverse origins and spread in less than five decades (Hartl and Dykhuizen, ...
Extreme Evolution
... changes thereby gained a strong survival or reproductive advantage. We found that even the tilapia species we sequenced, which is an evolutionarily unremarkable cichlid compared with its brethren, had more such mutations than the sticklebacks. And the cichlids from the hyperdiverse groups in Lake Ma ...
... changes thereby gained a strong survival or reproductive advantage. We found that even the tilapia species we sequenced, which is an evolutionarily unremarkable cichlid compared with its brethren, had more such mutations than the sticklebacks. And the cichlids from the hyperdiverse groups in Lake Ma ...
Challenging the dogma: the hidden layer of non-protein
... modulators of mRNA translation and stability, but recent evidence indicates that miRNAs also play a key role in epigenetic modification of chromatin (see below). There are probably tens or even hundreds of thousands of small RNAs produced by processing of expressed noncoding RNA sequences, including ...
... modulators of mRNA translation and stability, but recent evidence indicates that miRNAs also play a key role in epigenetic modification of chromatin (see below). There are probably tens or even hundreds of thousands of small RNAs produced by processing of expressed noncoding RNA sequences, including ...
Pitfalls in Genetic Association Studies [M.Tevfik DORAK]
... mRNA editing (base modification) is a different mechanism of alternative splicing ...
... mRNA editing (base modification) is a different mechanism of alternative splicing ...
The Recombinant DNA Controversy: A Contemporary
... long before the development of recombinant DNA techniques. The reason that recombinant DNA techniques are so important is simply that they make it possible for us to reach a completely new level in our understanding of how complex organisms function. Before the development of these techniques, we ha ...
... long before the development of recombinant DNA techniques. The reason that recombinant DNA techniques are so important is simply that they make it possible for us to reach a completely new level in our understanding of how complex organisms function. Before the development of these techniques, we ha ...
THR_Paper2_CRISPR
... inserting the new CRISPR-Cas9 system into a mouse, it will find that specific gene and cut it out ("Genome Editing: Efficient CRISPR Experiments in Mouse Cells”). This experiment has not only proved to be successful in mice, but in all species tested; as of now, scientists have not found a single li ...
... inserting the new CRISPR-Cas9 system into a mouse, it will find that specific gene and cut it out ("Genome Editing: Efficient CRISPR Experiments in Mouse Cells”). This experiment has not only proved to be successful in mice, but in all species tested; as of now, scientists have not found a single li ...