Home (Chimera)
Home  
 
 
Home » Biology » Chimera


 

Chimera

Biology ChiasmaChi-square test

chimera
an individual composed of a mixture of genetically different cells
Source: Jenkins, John B. 1990. Human Genetics, 2nd Edition. New York: Harper & Row ...

 


Chimera (genetics)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search ...

An experimental targeted repair process in which a desirable sequence of DNA is combined with RNA to form a chimeraplast. These molecules bind selectively to the target DNA.

Chimera
An organism comprised of cells from 2 or more zygotes.
Related Terms:
Zygote
Mostly diploid cell formed by union of twogametes or reproductive cells. Ovum (female gamete) fertilized by a sperm (male gamete).

Chimaera (chimera) An animal (or plant) made up from a mixture of cells from more than one species. Also (in human genetics), an individual made up from cells derived from two or more zygotes.

[drugs used in cancer chemotherapy] Chernobyl[radiation] [effect of fallout] Chiasma Chimera Chimpanzee[genome] [evolutionary relationships] [learned behavior] [immunodeficiency virus (SIV)] Chitin[inhibitors as insecticides] Chlamydia Chloracne ...

Chimeras (← links)
Sanchez salorio syndrome (← links)
Delusional disorder (← links)
Somatic cells (← links)
Lemniscus medialis (← links)
Sister chromatid exchange (← links)
Medial lemniscus (← links)
Lamina ventralis (← links) ...

chimeras) are also identified. (2) A greedy assembly algorithm is used to construct a layout of read overlaps, based on the pairwise comparisons.

Over 30000 antibody/antibodies, 16000 Recombinant Protein/Proteins, 15000 Chimera RNAi and more... Antibody School. Reagent Commercialization ...
Full article ...

The authors conclude that cryptomonad algae is a chimera of two endosymbiotic events. First a endosymbiotic event in which red algae was formed, then this eukaryotic red algae being taken into a protozoan creating the crytomonad algae.

See also: Human, Cells, DNA, Organ, Sequence

Biology ChiasmaChi-square test

 
 rssRSS