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... to provide readers a taste for the much broader, rapid collection of DNA databases for all sort of creatures large or small and wild ... press release. The last few days has seen a number of outlets reporting the use of DNA barcodes to trace the origin of sharks – in ... release – at least, not the one in Grist below. This is a follow to AFP: DNA clue to shark find trade;
Scientific American ...
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A protein that plays a key role in copying DNA also plays a vital role in repairing breaks in it, UC ... known as proliferating cell nuclear antigen, forms a ring that fits around the DNA double helix. This cuff-like ring helps to keep in place ... journal Molecular Cell, shows that PCNA performs a similar function during DNA recombination -- when pairs of chromosomes line up and exchange strands of DNA. ...
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... in Endangered Species Research.
For the first time, scientists have used DNA from shark fins to determine where they came from. The researchers traced finds ... and Indo-Pacific oceans. According to their analysis of the mitochondrial DNA, which they compared samples from live hammerhead population, ... other shark species.
Related Content:
80beats: DNA Scanner Proves that NYC Sushi Contains Endangered ...
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... 8221; Oh, and let’s not forget what makes this art even more creepy… their DNA is embedded in it. You want your own little baby Shiloh? Now’s your chance! “The statues are embedded with crushed glass containing Brad and Angie’s DNA obtained from wine glasses from which they drank while reportedly celebrating the anniversary of their first meeting ...
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Researchers show how proteins slide along DNA to carry out vital biological processes.
For decades, scientists have known that proteins searching for genetic sequences are able to locate them at rates much faster than expected. They found that rather than moving around the entire three-dimensional space inside a cell, they moved in one-dimension, along DNA molecules.
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Researchers have pinpointed a mechanism that may help explain how chromosomal translocations — the supposedly random shuffling of large chunks of DNA that frequently lead to cancer — aren’t so random after all. They have developed a model of such chromosomal mix-ups in prostate cancer which indicates that the male sex hormone (androgen) receptor unexpectedly plays a key role in ...
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... t considered yet is variation in reported crime. Where there are more crimes, there should be more convicts whose DNA is to be sampled and, in some states, more arrestees to be swabbed for the database as well. We ... effect upon the practice. Beyond this, explanations for the rather large variation in the practice of DNA data warehousing remain elusive to me.
What do you think’s going on ...
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... weather patterns and much more.
In addition, there is evidence for a whole new type of medicine in which DNA can be influenced and reprogrammed by words and frequencies WITHOUT cutting out ... consciousness, namely one, in which we attain access to all information via our DNA without being forced or remotely controlled about what to do with that information. We now know that just as on the internet ...
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... announced an ambitious effort to build a nanoscale DNA sequencer. In following video IBM Researchers Stas ... key is the optimization of the process which controls the rate at which a DNA strand pass through the nanopore. For this IBM researchers ... reservoir by the action of a biasing voltage. In the absence of anything else, the DNA would translocate through the pore at a speed of several million bases ...
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... it holds genetic information that is passed to the next generations. Today, DNA seems to be very well-studied and a lot of breakthroughs became possible, but there are still a lot of “secrets†to ... “genetic†details. However, we know that many students have difficulties when it comes to understanding DNA and its peculiarities.
If at the moment you are stuck with the essay on ...
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