Results 291 to 300 of about 1,220,765 (311)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Related searches:
Related searches:
Evolutionary sequences in mammalian reproductive biology
Journal of Experimental Zoology Part A: Ecological and Integrative Physiology, 2020AbstractBroad biological aspects and accepted evolutionary sequences may offer useful guidance towards a comprehensive explanation of the function of mammalian ovaries and oviducts and their vital contribution to the events of fertilization. Cooling of the preovulatory follicles before ovulation may well have its roots in the primitive stages of ...
Ronald H. F. Hunter+1 more
openaire +2 more sources
Comparative biology: beyond sequence analysis
Current Opinion in Biotechnology, 2007Comparative analysis is a fundamental tool in biology. Conservation among species greatly assists the detection and characterization of functional elements, whereas inter-species differences are probably the best indicators of biological adaptation. Traditionally, comparative approaches were applied to the analysis of genomic sequences.
Naama Barkai, Yonatan Bilu, Itay Tirosh
openaire +3 more sources
Genome annotation: from sequence to biology [PDF]
The genome sequence of an organism is an information resource unlike any that biologists have previously had access to. But the value of the genome is only as good as its annotation. It is the annotation that bridges the gap from the sequence to the biology of the organism.
openaire +2 more sources
Fruits of Genome Sequences for Biology
Science, 2011It is nearly impossible for today's students to think about biology without DNA ...
openaire +2 more sources
Centromeres: Sequences, Structure, and Biology
2012Although technological advances have continued to change the speed, cost, and number of plant genomes sequenced (see Flagel and Blackman 2012, this volume), parts of genomes remain to be sequenced and explored. Even the best-sequenced plant genomes, including Arabidopsis thaliana and rice, are missing 7–8% of their total genomic information (Kaul et al.
Jiming Jiang, Cory D. Hirsch
openaire +2 more sources
Potyvirus serology, sequences and biology
1992Amino acid sequences of the cytoplasmic cylindrical inclusion protein (CIP), large nuclear inclusion protein (NIb), and coat protein (CP) of potyviruses were re-examined in light of reported serological relationships, and correlated with known and deduced biological functions. No obvious correlations were observed between either amino acid sequences or
openaire +3 more sources
A Sequence for Biology Studies
Science, 1966As another parent of two children who have bad high school biology (both had the Biological Sciences Curriculum Study Blue Version course), I would like to comment on Branson's letter (28 Oct.). My children have both come away, instilled with enthusiasm for the study of biology, with the feeling that it's a science, that it's understandable ...
Walter F. Cannon, M. W. Burke-Gaffney
openaire +7 more sources
Next-generation sequencing transforms today's biology [PDF]
A new generation of non-Sanger-based sequencing technologies has delivered on its promise of sequencing DNA at unprecedented speed, thereby enabling impressive scientific achievements and novel biological applications. However, before stepping into the limelight, next-generation sequencing had to overcome the inertia of a field that relied on Sanger ...
openaire +2 more sources
C. elegans : Sequence to Biology
Science, 1998This special issue of Science celebrates a landmark in biology: determination of the essentially complete DNA sequence of an animal genome. The animal is a small invertebrate, the nematode (or roundworm) Caenorhabditis elegans , and the sequence consists of about 97 million base pairs of DNA, approximately one-thirtieth the number in the human genome ...
H. Robert Horvitz+3 more
openaire +2 more sources