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Genetics classical

Presentation of microorganism — Fungus isolated from Nature, not genetically modihed yield improvement using classical genetics. [Pg.418]

Balzer, W. and Dawe, C. M. (1986), Structure and comparison of genetic theories (1) Classical genetics (2) The reduction of character-factor genetics to molecular genetics , The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science, 57, 55 -69, 177-191. [Pg.172]

What geneticist could take seriously any explication of reduction-ism which leads to the conclusion that molecular genetics does not amount to a successful reduction of classical genetics (Stent, 1986). [Pg.327]

The interaction of soybean cyst nematode (SCN) with soybean (Glycine max) has been extensively studied in the United States. This system has been used as a model to dissect the genetics of nematode parasitism, mainly due to the tractability of classical genetic manipulation of the nematode. The remainder of this brief review will focus on the SCN side of the interaction with its host and the progress that has been made in unravelling the complex genetic systems controlling parasitic behaviour. [Pg.54]

The role of histone becomes, thus, part of the problem of how the environment affects gene activity. Biology has by now outgrown the abstract and rigid limitations of classical genetics for now it is dear that the chromosome, like other centres of vital activity, is subject to regulation by feed-back of the periphery. A. E. Mirsky, 1965 (sic ) [1]... [Pg.316]

The genome of an organism provides a blue print for its structural and functional attributes. Genome functions through the synthesis, regulation, and activity of proteins. A dynamic and well balanced network of DNA-protein, RNA-protein, and protein-protein interactions (PPIs) maintain the cellular system as a complex but cohesive unit (1). Proteomics serves as a medium to unravel protein functions and ultimately to understand a living system or a disease condition (2-5). Over the years, classical genetic... [Pg.67]

Classical genetic investigations. Early genetic investigations of A,flavus and A. parasiticus were hampered by the lack of any known means of sexual reproduction in these imp ect fungal species. Furthermore, a complex vegetative... [Pg.275]

In classical genetic self-incompatability systems, the site of pollen tube inhibition is on the stigma surface or somewhere in the style. A pollen grain may fail to genninate, or produces a tube that grows abnonnally and is soon occluded by callose, or... [Pg.544]

Eukaryotes A yeast cell, one of the simplest eukaryotes, has 2.6 times more DNA in its genome than an E. coli cell (Table 24-2). Cells of Drosophila, the fruit fly used in classical genetic studies, contain more than 35 times as much DNA as E. coli cells, and human cells have almost 700 times as much. The cells of many plants and amphibians contain even more. The genetic material of eukaryotic cells is apportioned into chromosomes, the diploid (2n) number depending on the species (Table 24-2). A human somatic cell, for example, has 46 chro-... [Pg.926]

As in classical genetics, a chemical genetic approach involves screening with probes that potentially could interact with any target in the genome, while trying to identify specific phenotypes. An alternate approach, termed reverse chemical... [Pg.4]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.4 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.4 ]




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