Coding region Regions of DNA/RNA sequences that code for proteins. Usually starts with a start codon (ATG) and ends with a stop codon. Related ...
A segment of DNA that does not comprise a gene and thus does not code for a protein. Non-coding regions are interspersed throughout DNA. A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z ...
Coding region A sequence of DNA that encodes a polypeptide. Codominance The observation of a phenotype caused by independent expression of both alleles of a gene in a diploid.
coding region The DNA sequence of a gene that is translated into a protein.
The coding region is the portion of the mRNA that will eventually be translated. Upstream untranslated region (5' UTR) can serve several functions, including mRNA transport, and initiation of translation (including, portions of the Kozak sequence).
The coding region of a eukaryotic gene that is expressed. Exons are separated from each other by introns. exoskeleton ...
To identify all coding regions in a large segment of genomic DNA. To construct and order high-quality, tissue-specific, full-length cDNA libraries.
But also, importantly, if you compare the genome of zebra fish to the genome of human for a particular gene, and you look outside the coding regions-outside the regions that actually code for protein-you can find regions of a hundred or two hundred ...
They all contain within their coding regions a sequence of some 180 nucleotides called a homeobox. The approximately 60 amino acids encoded by the homeobox are called a homeodomain. It mediates DNA binding by these proteins.
DOWNSTREAM - Identifies sequences proceeding farther in the direction of expression; for example, the coding region is downstream from the initiation codon, toward the 3' end of an mRNA molecule.
A genomic clone may contain coding regions, exons, introns, 5' flanking regions, 5' untranslated regions, 3' flanking regions, 3' untranslated regions, or it may contain none of these...
Almost half the DNA in eukaryotic cells is repeated nucleotide sequences. Protein-coding sequences are interrupted by non-coding regions. Non-coding interruptions are known as intervening sequences or introns.
There are sequences interspersed within the coding region of genes. They are excised after the DNA is translated into RNA. These excised DNA sequences are called introns (the coding DNA sequences are called exons).
unit of hereditary material; an ordered sequence of nucleotide bases that encodes a product (this product could be just RNA like rRNA or finally coding for a protein). The gene includes, however, regions preceding and following the coding region (5' ...
And because of this uniqueness, tandem repeats can indeed be used for fingerprinting... to remember that tandem repeats tend to occur in a part of the genome that doesn't code for protein, what we will refer to as non-coding regions.
See also: Sequence, DNA, Gene, Protein, Genome
 
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