
Comparative analysis of the Geobacillus hemicellulose utilization locus reveals a highly
... hemicellulose utilization (HUS) loci were identified in the complete and partial genomes of 17/24 Geobacillus strains. These HUS loci are localized on a common genomic island. Comparative analyses of these loci revealed extensive variability among the Geobacillus hemicellulose utilization systems, w ...
... hemicellulose utilization (HUS) loci were identified in the complete and partial genomes of 17/24 Geobacillus strains. These HUS loci are localized on a common genomic island. Comparative analyses of these loci revealed extensive variability among the Geobacillus hemicellulose utilization systems, w ...
Human, yeast and hybrid 3-phosphoglycerate kinase gene
... Acids Res. 12, pp. 8951-8969, 1984). In addition, data is presented here which suggests that the human PGK mRNA is less efficiently translated than the yeast PGK mRNA. Two different mechanisms of controlling gene expression are indicated. Both mechanisms appear to be independent of gene copy number. ...
... Acids Res. 12, pp. 8951-8969, 1984). In addition, data is presented here which suggests that the human PGK mRNA is less efficiently translated than the yeast PGK mRNA. Two different mechanisms of controlling gene expression are indicated. Both mechanisms appear to be independent of gene copy number. ...
View/Open
... With the discovery of Mendel’s laws of inheritance in the mid nineties, phenotypic studies using biparental segregating populations have identified a large number of major genes in crop species. Subsequently, linkage studies have helped to map genes encoding phenotypes on chromosomes and assigned th ...
... With the discovery of Mendel’s laws of inheritance in the mid nineties, phenotypic studies using biparental segregating populations have identified a large number of major genes in crop species. Subsequently, linkage studies have helped to map genes encoding phenotypes on chromosomes and assigned th ...
Lampbrush Chromosomes of the Chicken
... of meiotic prophase and are characterized by extensive transcription on the loops. An excellent review of LBC investigations and techniques has just been published by Callan (1986). This reference should be consulted for a more detailed discussion. Despite a century of study, we still know relativel ...
... of meiotic prophase and are characterized by extensive transcription on the loops. An excellent review of LBC investigations and techniques has just been published by Callan (1986). This reference should be consulted for a more detailed discussion. Despite a century of study, we still know relativel ...
Characterisation of marsupial PHLDA2 reveals eutherian specific acquisition of imprinting Open Access
... the templates without reverse transcription (data not shown). Hence all intronic fragments amplified by RT-PCR were derived from unspliced transcripts, not from genomic DNA. The genomic PCR products showed that all four individuals were heterozygous for the length polymorphism and both alleles can b ...
... the templates without reverse transcription (data not shown). Hence all intronic fragments amplified by RT-PCR were derived from unspliced transcripts, not from genomic DNA. The genomic PCR products showed that all four individuals were heterozygous for the length polymorphism and both alleles can b ...
Engineered Cpf1 Enzymes with Altered PAM Specificities
... of TYCV target sites had >20% indel for RR (vs. 3/16 for WT), and 10/13 (77%) of TATV target sites had >20% indel for RVR (vs. 0/13 for WT). Moreover, the RR variant also had significant activity at VYCV target sites (>20% indel for 25/37 (68%) of sites) (Fig. 2h), although this activity was somewha ...
... of TYCV target sites had >20% indel for RR (vs. 3/16 for WT), and 10/13 (77%) of TATV target sites had >20% indel for RVR (vs. 0/13 for WT). Moreover, the RR variant also had significant activity at VYCV target sites (>20% indel for 25/37 (68%) of sites) (Fig. 2h), although this activity was somewha ...
Heritable Disorders of Connective Tissue: Research & Repository
... 1. Regulates Fibril spacing 2. Associates with other matrix proteins to make this happen ...
... 1. Regulates Fibril spacing 2. Associates with other matrix proteins to make this happen ...
Class XII biology Worksheet genetics and evolution
... to become functional. D’09 According to Hardy-Weinberg’s principle the allele frequency of a population remains constant. How do you interpret the change of frequency of alleles in a population? AI’09 When and at what end does the ‘tailing’ of hnRNA take place? AI’09 At which ends do ‘ capping’ and ...
... to become functional. D’09 According to Hardy-Weinberg’s principle the allele frequency of a population remains constant. How do you interpret the change of frequency of alleles in a population? AI’09 When and at what end does the ‘tailing’ of hnRNA take place? AI’09 At which ends do ‘ capping’ and ...
PDF version - EpiGeneSys
... saturation, and thus chromatin fibre compaction. However, this method consumes a large amount of material, and thus is often not practical.(comment 7) In some circumstances, a thorough analysis of protein content may be necessary ? see (Huynh et al, 2005). This may be the case when working with unus ...
... saturation, and thus chromatin fibre compaction. However, this method consumes a large amount of material, and thus is often not practical.(comment 7) In some circumstances, a thorough analysis of protein content may be necessary ? see (Huynh et al, 2005). This may be the case when working with unus ...
View PDF - Genetics
... BLAST+ 2.2.31 (Camacho et al. 2009) was used to run tblastn searches (default settings) with the selected Arabidopsis thaliana amino acid sequences as queries against each of the assembled Sileneae transcriptomes. The top hit in each transcriptome was retrieved with a custom Perl script using Bio ...
... BLAST+ 2.2.31 (Camacho et al. 2009) was used to run tblastn searches (default settings) with the selected Arabidopsis thaliana amino acid sequences as queries against each of the assembled Sileneae transcriptomes. The top hit in each transcriptome was retrieved with a custom Perl script using Bio ...
Fifteen years of genomewide scans for selection: trends, lessons
... Rienzo 2010; Haasl et al. 2014). At the biological level, another potential bias derives from the fact that different taxa are characterized by a remarkable diversity of demographic and natural histories as well as a wide variety of environmental factors that may act as selective pressures. Frequent ...
... Rienzo 2010; Haasl et al. 2014). At the biological level, another potential bias derives from the fact that different taxa are characterized by a remarkable diversity of demographic and natural histories as well as a wide variety of environmental factors that may act as selective pressures. Frequent ...
Evolution of RH Genes in Hominoids: Characterization of a Gorilla
... and RhcE polypeptides were 29 and 25, respectively ( Table 2). Differences between gorilla RHCE-like polypeptide and two other gorilla Rh-like polypeptides were almost identical (24 and 25, respectively) ( Table 2). The topology of the phylogenetic tree obtained from the alignment shown in Figure 4 ...
... and RhcE polypeptides were 29 and 25, respectively ( Table 2). Differences between gorilla RHCE-like polypeptide and two other gorilla Rh-like polypeptides were almost identical (24 and 25, respectively) ( Table 2). The topology of the phylogenetic tree obtained from the alignment shown in Figure 4 ...
DNA How the Molecule of Heredity Carries, Replicates, and
... •Proteins read the DNA sequence of nucleotides as the DNA helix unwinds. Proteins can either bind to a DNA sequence, or initiate the copying of it. •Human genome is believed to be 250 million nucleotides long. Four possible nucleotides. Thus 4250,000,000 possible sequences in the human genome. •An a ...
... •Proteins read the DNA sequence of nucleotides as the DNA helix unwinds. Proteins can either bind to a DNA sequence, or initiate the copying of it. •Human genome is believed to be 250 million nucleotides long. Four possible nucleotides. Thus 4250,000,000 possible sequences in the human genome. •An a ...
CRISPR-Cas9 Mouse Toolbox
... of adenocarcinoma pathology. These plasmids as well as a backbone plasmid for cloning new targets are described here. 1. AAV:ITR-U6-sgRNA(Kras)-U6-sgRNA(p53)-U6-sgRNA(Lkb1)-pEFS-Rluc-2A-CreshortPA-KrasG12D_HDRdonor-ITR (AAV-KPL) This plasmid contains two expression cassettes, Renilla luciferase-2A-C ...
... of adenocarcinoma pathology. These plasmids as well as a backbone plasmid for cloning new targets are described here. 1. AAV:ITR-U6-sgRNA(Kras)-U6-sgRNA(p53)-U6-sgRNA(Lkb1)-pEFS-Rluc-2A-CreshortPA-KrasG12D_HDRdonor-ITR (AAV-KPL) This plasmid contains two expression cassettes, Renilla luciferase-2A-C ...
Accepted Version - CSIRO Research Publications Repository
... are associated with gene activation [15,17]. Histone lysine residues are able to be mono-, di-, or tri-methylated and each methylation state is associated with different functions [15,17]. Epigenetic modifications play important roles in various aspects of the plant life cycle such as genome integri ...
... are associated with gene activation [15,17]. Histone lysine residues are able to be mono-, di-, or tri-methylated and each methylation state is associated with different functions [15,17]. Epigenetic modifications play important roles in various aspects of the plant life cycle such as genome integri ...
Biophysics 101 Genomics and Computational Biology
... An altered specificity mutation in the lambda repressor induces global reorganization of the protein-DNA interface. An altered-specificity mutation in a human POU domain demonstrates functional analogy between the POU-specific subdomain and Analysis of estrogen response element binding by geneticall ...
... An altered specificity mutation in the lambda repressor induces global reorganization of the protein-DNA interface. An altered-specificity mutation in a human POU domain demonstrates functional analogy between the POU-specific subdomain and Analysis of estrogen response element binding by geneticall ...
B. Eukaryotic RNA polymerases
... a) Proteins that bind to DNA that increase the affinity of RNA polymerase for the promoter (1) Changes a weak promoter into a strong promoter b) cII (1) cII is a protein from bacteriophage that binds to the promoter pI and pre (a) It is needed for initiation of transcription (2) The pI and pre p ...
... a) Proteins that bind to DNA that increase the affinity of RNA polymerase for the promoter (1) Changes a weak promoter into a strong promoter b) cII (1) cII is a protein from bacteriophage that binds to the promoter pI and pre (a) It is needed for initiation of transcription (2) The pI and pre p ...
Lecture 3 - Montefiore Institute ULg
... What do we need to carry out a genome-wide association study? The tools include - computerized databases that contain the reference human genome sequence, - a map of human genetic variation and - a set of new technologies that can quickly and accurately analyze (whole-genome) samples for genetic v ...
... What do we need to carry out a genome-wide association study? The tools include - computerized databases that contain the reference human genome sequence, - a map of human genetic variation and - a set of new technologies that can quickly and accurately analyze (whole-genome) samples for genetic v ...
Cloning of genes from genomic DNA: Part 3
... Continuing from our isolation of genomic DNA and PCR amplification of either the evenskipped gene or the twist gene, we will now move on to the third step in the cloning procedure. We will use restriction enzymes to cleave off the ends of the PCR products. The oligonucleotide primers used in the PCR ...
... Continuing from our isolation of genomic DNA and PCR amplification of either the evenskipped gene or the twist gene, we will now move on to the third step in the cloning procedure. We will use restriction enzymes to cleave off the ends of the PCR products. The oligonucleotide primers used in the PCR ...
Nucleic Acids: RNA and chemistry
... lifetime than the others Ribonucleases act more avidly on it We need a mechanism for eliminating it because the cell wants to control concentrations of specific proteins ...
... lifetime than the others Ribonucleases act more avidly on it We need a mechanism for eliminating it because the cell wants to control concentrations of specific proteins ...
Distinguishing Among Evolutionary Models for the Maintenance of
... a common contributor of new genetic material. Estimates from Arabidopsis thaliana, Mus musculus, Rattus norvegicus, Homo sapiens, and Saccharomyces cerevisiae put the number of tandemly arrayed duplicates between 10% and 20% of all genes, though the exact meaning of ‘‘tandem’’ can differ in each pap ...
... a common contributor of new genetic material. Estimates from Arabidopsis thaliana, Mus musculus, Rattus norvegicus, Homo sapiens, and Saccharomyces cerevisiae put the number of tandemly arrayed duplicates between 10% and 20% of all genes, though the exact meaning of ‘‘tandem’’ can differ in each pap ...
Annotation Instruction Sheet A. Information for Beginning Annotators
... In practice creating a gene model is simply designating a series of base coordinates that describe the structure of the gene (i.e. the exact base where each exon begins and ends). In species where evidence of expression (EST or cDNA sequences) is available one may be able to identify the coordinates ...
... In practice creating a gene model is simply designating a series of base coordinates that describe the structure of the gene (i.e. the exact base where each exon begins and ends). In species where evidence of expression (EST or cDNA sequences) is available one may be able to identify the coordinates ...
Genetics and Genomics
... 6.1. Maternal genetic effect ........................................................................................... 6.2. Mitochondrial inheritance ....................................................................................... 7. The X chromosome inactivation ........................... ...
... 6.1. Maternal genetic effect ........................................................................................... 6.2. Mitochondrial inheritance ....................................................................................... 7. The X chromosome inactivation ........................... ...