Results 301 to 310 of about 1,762,314 (335)
Preservation of 5-Hydroxymethylcytosine Levels in LRIG1 across Genomic DNA and Cell-Free DNA in Glioma Patients. [PDF]
Jevšinek Skok D, Bolha L, Hauptman N.
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Ultrasensitive detection of 5-hydroxymethylcytosine in genomic DNA using a graphene-based sensor modified with biotin and gold nanoparticles. [PDF]
Imran H+5 more
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Author Correction: Quantifying mammalian genomic DNA hydroxymethylcytosine content using solid-state nanopores. [PDF]
Zahid OK, Zhao BS, He C, Hall AR.
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Analysis of Genomic DNA with the UCSC Genome Browser [PDF]
Genomic DNA is being sequenced and annotated at a rapid rate, with terabases of DNA currently deposited in GenBank and other repositories. Genome browsers provide an essential collection of resources to visualize and analyze chromosomal DNA. The University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC) Genome Browser provides annotations from the level of single ...
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Repetitive DNA in eukaryotic genomes
Chromosome Research, 2015Repetitive DNA--sequence motifs repeated hundreds or thousands of times in the genome--makes up the major proportion of all the nuclear DNA in most eukaryotic genomes. However, the significance of repetitive DNA in the genome is not completely understood, and it has been considered to have both structural and functional roles, or perhaps even no ...
Ettore Olmo+2 more
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Current Protocols in Molecular Biology, 1987
AbstractGenomic DNA libraries are almost always screened by hybridization using a radioactive nucleic acid probe. Since this approach is essentially independent of a particular vector or type of target DNA, the main problem faced when considering creation of a genomic DNA library is simply generating a large enough number of recombinant DNA clones. The
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AbstractGenomic DNA libraries are almost always screened by hybridization using a radioactive nucleic acid probe. Since this approach is essentially independent of a particular vector or type of target DNA, the main problem faced when considering creation of a genomic DNA library is simply generating a large enough number of recombinant DNA clones. The
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1987
Within the scope of this laboratory guide it is impossible to give a full review of all the procedures used in the isolation of intact genomic DNA. However, we shall describe a general method we used which gives an excellent quality of both nuclei and DNA suitable for genomic sequencing.
Jean-Pierre Jost, Hanspeter Saluz
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Within the scope of this laboratory guide it is impossible to give a full review of all the procedures used in the isolation of intact genomic DNA. However, we shall describe a general method we used which gives an excellent quality of both nuclei and DNA suitable for genomic sequencing.
Jean-Pierre Jost, Hanspeter Saluz
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Genome Size of Mycoplasmal DNA
Nature, 1969ELECTRON microscopic studies of the contour length of DNA from a mycoplasma species, Mycoplasma hominis (H 39)1, have shown that the DNA in this organism is organized in a single circular chromosome, 262 microns long, corresponding to a molecular weight of 5.0 × 108 daltons.
A L Bak+3 more
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Symbiotic DNA in eukaryotic genomes
Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 1996The recent explosive growth of molecular genetic databases has yielded increasingly detailed insights into the evolutionary dynamics of eukaryotic genomes. DNA sequences with the self-encoded ability to transpose and replicate are unexpectedly abundant and widespread in eukaryotic genomes. They seem to be sexual parasites.
Graham Bell, Clifford Zeyl
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DNA Repeats in the Human Genome
1999Repetitive DNA sequences, interspersed throughout the human genome, are capable of forming a wide variety of unusual DNA structures with simple and complex loopfolding patterns. The hairpin formed by the fragile X repeat, (CCG)n, and the bipartite triplex formed by the Friedreich's ataxia repeat, (GAA)n/(TTC)n, show simple loopfolding.
S. V. Santhana Mariappan+4 more
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