Replicon fusion The integration of one replicon into another to form a single replicon.
Replicon. A chromosomal region containing the DNA sequences necessary to initiate DNA replication processes. Repressor. A DNA-binding protein in prokaryotes that blocks gene transcription by binding to the operator.
Replicon A segment of DNA that carries its own origin of replication and can replicate autonomously; bacterial plasmids are replicons.
Replicon The term proposed by Jacob and Brenner (1963) for a unit of replication of the hereditary material, that is, ...
Towards this goal, we have developed a plasmid vector, pSCANS, based on the low-copy F replicon which allows rapid generation of an ordered set of nested deletions from either strand of a cloned DNA fragment.
Systems in which T-DNA and vir genes are located on separate replicons are called T-DNA binary systems. T-DNA is located on the binary vector (the non-T-DNA region of this vector containing origin[s] of replication that could function both in E.
A unique dNA sequence of a replicon at which dNA replication is initiated and proceeds bidirectionally or unidirectionally.
The TAC vector contains the P1 bacteriophage replicon, which maintains the vector in a single copy, and therefore renders foreign DNA fragments stable, in E. coli cells.
Protein that recognizes the origin of replication on a replicon and takes part in primosome construction. 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 ...
DNA-based vaccines include DNA, they include recombinant viruses such as recombinant pox viruses, recombinant adenoviruses, also something called "replicons," as well as other technologies that are on the horizon.
See also: Origin, Replication, Trans, Sequence, Bacteria
 
|