in vivo within the living body Source: Jenkins, John B. 1990. Human Genetics, 2nd Edition. New York: Harper & Row ...
In vivo: Inside a living organism. Karyotype: A photomicrograph of an individual's chromosomes arranged in a standard format showing the number, size, and shape of each chromo some type. Mapping: See gene mapping, physical map.
In vivo Reactions that take place inside the cell. IPTG An abbreviation for isopropyl-฿-D-thiogalactoside. A gratuitous inducer of the lac operon.
In Vivo Libraries of the Human Genome in Mice as a Reagent to Sift Genomic Regions for Function Rubin, E.M., Zhu, Y., Fraser, K., Ueda, Y., Smith, D.J., Symula, D., Cheng, J.F.
In vivo. Refers to biological processes that take place within a living organism or cell. Ion. A charged particle.
In vivo For in vivo techniques the challenge of inserting the genes is even greater.
In vivo In vivo gene therapy treats cells in the individual without removing them. Retroviruses can be used to introduce genes directly into the body.
[edit] In vivo gene transfer During In vivo gene transfer the genes are transferred directly into the tissue of the patient.
In vivo Within a living organism. Antonym: in vitro. Related Terms: In vitro Outside a living organism. In a glass (test-tube). Antonym: in vivo.
An in vivo imaging technique that detects tiny magnetic fields generated by electrical current loops, which are typically due to brain activity. MAGNETOSOMES Magnetic particles that are created within organelles.
Cloning in vivo can be done in unicellular microbes like E. coli unicellular eukaryotes like yeast and in mammalian cells grown in tissue culture.
To increase the number of copies of a DNA sequence, in vivo by inserting into a cloning vector that replicates within a host cell, or in vitro by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Anaerobe. An organism that grows in the absence of oxygen. See Aerobe.
Amplification An increase in the number of copies of a specific DNA fragment; can be in vivo or in vitro. See cloning, polymerase chain reaction ...
Preferentially kills tumour cells in vivo and in vitro, causes necrosis of certain transplanted tumours in mice and inhibits experimental metastases.
Omne vivum ex ovo กค In vivo กค In vitro กค In utero กค In silico Related disciplines Medicine (Physician) กค Physical anthropology กค Environmental science กค Life Sciences กค Biotechnology ...
In vitro Outside a living organism. In a glass (test-tube). Antonym: in vivo. Related Terms: In vivo Within a living organism. Antonym: in vitro.
end, we and many colleagues have discovered not just that we can induce cell division, but understand more now about the differentiation process and differentiation really is only one of the choices of these cells, because we found that both in ...
HETERODUPLEX DNA - Generated by base pairing between complementary single strands derived from different parental duplex molecules; heteroduplex DNA molecules occur during genetic recombination in vivo and during hydridization of different but ...
An increase in the number of copies of a specific DNA fragment; can be in vivo or in vitro. See also: cloning, polymerase chain reaction Animal model See: model organisms ...
Y2H IP Co-localization staining (Red+Green=Yellow) Inhibition in vivo (Dom. Neg. interference) Express binding domain- see if it interferes with wild-type ...
Allorecognition: Recognition by T cells of the MHC molecules on an allogeneic individual's antigen-presenting cells, which results in allograft rejection in vivo and mixed lymphocyte reaction (MLR) in vitro.
A short sequence (of RNA or DNA) from which DNA replication can initiate. May be either a synthetic DNA or RNA or a length of RNA synthesized in vivo by primase.
As in various types of gene mutation such as trinucleotide repeat amplification or myc gene amplification - naturally occuring aberrations which have greatly increased the copy number of a triplet repeat or of a whole gene respectively in vivo.
Because intermediate filaments are very abundant in cells that are often subjected to high mechanical stress in vivo, it appears that their primary role is to provide physical strength to cells and tissues.
See also: Trans, Human, Cells, DNA, Cell
 
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