DNA clone A section of DNA that has been inserted into a vector molecule, such as a plasmid or a phage chromosome, and then replicated to form many identical copies. See also clone. Related Terms: Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) ...
All DNA clones derived from a particular tissue constitute a library of clones representing the genes that were expressed when the source tissue was harvested.
Each BAC is a DNA clone containing roughly 100 to 300 thousand base pairs of cloned DNA.
Random primed synthesis: If you have a DNA clone and you want to produce radioactive copies of it, one way is to denature it (separate the strands), then hybridize to that template a mixture of all possible 6-mer oligonucleotides.
A pool of complementary DNA clones produced by cDNA cloning of total messenger RNA from a single source (cell type, tissue, embryo). 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 ...
Common for many (perennial) crop plants, such as fruit trees, potatoes. Related Terms: DNA clone ...
DNA clones from many different libraries were used in the overall project, with most of those libraries being created by Dr. Pieter J. de Jong.
Ultimately, by the by the early 1990s these rudimentary maps with seven intervals had morphed into a map of about 40 intervals and now a set of overlapping recombinant DNA clones that span the entirety of the chromosome.
Synthesis of infective phage particles from a preparation of phage capsid proteins and a concatamer of phage DNA molecules. Commonly used to package DNA cloned onto a lambda vector (separated by cos sites) into infectious lambda particles.
See also: Clone, DNA, Chromosome, Sequence, Genome
 
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