|
Replicative - Definition of Replicative at Dictionary.com a free online dictionary with pronunciation, synonyms, and translation of Replicative. Look it up now! ... Use Replicative in a Sentence...
|
|
Replicative transposition - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Replicative transposition is a mechanism of transposition in molecular biology in which the transposable element is duplicated during the reaction, so that the transposing entity is a copy of the ori...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Replicative_transposition |
||
|
[edit] Adjective. replicative (comparative more replicative, superlative most replicative) ... Retrieved from "http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/replicative" ...
|
||
|
PB2 amino acid at position 627 affects replicative efficiency, but not cell tropism, of Hong Kong H5N1 influenza A viruses in mice. ... The identity of the PB2 amino acid at position 627 did not appreciably affect viral replicative efficiency in chicken embryo fibroblasts and a quail cell line; however, viruses with lysine...
|
||
|
Forty years after its discovery, replicative senescence remains a rich source of information about cell-cycle regulation and the progression from a normal to a transformed phenotype. Effectors of this growth-arrested state are being discovered at a great pace.
|
||
|
Some transposons, such as Tn5 or Tn10, move non-replicatively; that is, they don’t generate more copies of themselves in the ... Apparently, the transposase + transposon complex (at least for Tn5) requires magnesium cations to resolve the structure into the target site. ... this structure can be electroporated into cells,
|
||
|
The transposition of a transposable element to a new location without it being lost from the original location. ... Biology Glossary search by EverythingBio.com ... Website created and maintained by: Mark Lefers and the Holmgren Lab last updated: July 26, 200...
|
||
|
1 1981 IN VITRO-JOURNAL OF THE TISSUE CULTURE ASSOCIATION 17(3):254-254; RHEINWALD JG; REPLICATIVE SENESCENCE AND TERMINAL DIFFERENTIATION IN CULTURED-CELLS - THEIR RELATION TO AGING AND CANCER;
|
||
|
Definition of replicative form. Provided by Stedman's medical dictionary and Drugs.com. Includes medical terms and definitions. ... Stedman's > replicative form...
|
||
|
Abstract: Most cells cannot divide indefinitely due to a processtermed cellular or replicative senescence. Replicative senescence appearsto be a fundamental feature of somatic cells, with the exception of mosttumour cells and possibly certain stem cells.
|