repetitive regions การใช้
- The sequencer's pattern structure permitted memory saving by using patterns for repetitive regions.
- Repetitive regions of code characterize transposable elements; complementary but non-homologous regions are ubiquitous within transposons.
- Rep and Kistler have speculated that the presence of highly repetitive regions containing transposons, may promote mutation of resident effector genes.
- The problem of alignment accuracy to repetitive regions in the genome will result in less accurate analysis of methylation in those regions.
- Furthermore the EhV-86 genome revealed three distinct families ( A, B, C ) of repetitive regions within the genome.
- The longer read lengths in Sanger methods display significant advantages over other sequencing methods especially in terms of sequencing repetitive regions of the genome.
- To bridge the gaps caused by the repetitive regions, the Celera team relies on generating pieces of linking DNA from the genome being decoded.
- Since the repetitive regions seem to be in the genes for the bacterium's coat proteins, the effect is to change the composition of the coat at regular intervals.
- Both the ends and the middles of human chromosomes, the units in which DNA is packaged, consist of highly repetitive regions of DNA that may be hard to decode.
- "De novo " repeat identification is an initial scan of sequence data that seeks to find the repetitive regions of the genome, and to classify these repeats.
- The annealing of complementary sequences, such as antisense or repetitive regions between transcripts, forms an RNA duplex that may be processed by Dicer-2 into endo-siRNAs.
- Note, however, the absolute rate of indels in most known genomes, including humans, tends to be markedly lower than base substitutions, except near highly repetitive regions, including microsatellites.
- Unfortunately, you're going to get a very large number of hits, as highly-repetitive regions tend to occur frequently by chance ( due to gene slippage during copying ) . talk ) 19 : 49, 16 August 2009 ( UTC)
- Because the human genome contains many regions where the same DNA sequence is repeated over and over with few or no variations, some biologists believe it may be hard to reconstitute the genome from a shotgun experiment as the repetitive regions will yield a nightmare of almost identical pieces.
- The first of many confounding biological factors creeps in when we realize that " the " genome size doesn't exist; NCBI listed 3, 101, 788, 170 bases in a very nearly complete reference sequence, but individuals vary, and apparently there are " still " a few hard-to-sequence repetitive regions missing small bits of information.