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Genes.   80
 

Genes, Adenomatous Polyposis Coli -- See Genes, APC


Tumor suppressor genes located in the 5q21 region on the long arm of human chromosome 5. The mutation of these genes is associated with familial adenomatous polyposis (ADENOMATOUS POLYPOSIS COLI) and GARDNER SYNDROME, as well as some sporadic colorectal cancers
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Genes -- Analysis -- Data processing. : Bioinformatics : a practical guide to the analysis of genes and proteins / [edited by] Andreas D. Baxevanis, B.F. Francis Ouellette  2001 1
Genes -- Analysis -- Periodicals : BMC systems biology  2019 1
  Genes, APC -- 2 Related Subjects   2
Genes, APC : APC proteins / edited by Inke S. Näthke, Brooke M. McCartney  2009 1
 

Genes, Archaeal -- See Also Genome, Archaeal


The genetic complement of an archaeal organism (ARCHAEA) as represented in its DNA
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Genes, Artificial -- See Genes, Synthetic


Biologically functional sequences of DNA chemically synthesized in vitro
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Genes, Bacterial -- See Also Genome, Bacterial


The genetic complement of a BACTERIA as represented in its DNA
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Genes, Bacterial : The horizontal gene pool : bacterial plasmids and gene spread / edited by Christopher M. Thomas  2000 1
Genes, Bacterial -- genetics. : Bacterial sensors : synthetic design and application principles / Jan Roelof van der Meer  2011 1
Genes, BRCA1   2
Genes, BRCA2   2
 

Genes, c-erbB-3 -- See Genes, erbB


Retrovirus-associated DNA sequences (erbB) originally isolated from, or related to, the avian erythroblastosis virus (AEV). These genes code for the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) family of receptors which is important in the control of normal cell proliferation and in the pathogenesis of human cancer. The genes include erbB-1 (GENES, ERBB-1), erbB-2 (GENES, ERBB-2), and erbB-3, all of which show abnormalities of expression in various human neoplasms
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Genes, c-myc -- See Genes, myc


Family of retrovirus-associated DNA sequences (myc) originally isolated from an avian myelocytomatosis virus. The proto-oncogene myc (c-myc) codes for a nuclear protein which is involved in nucleic acid metabolism and in mediating the cellular response to growth factors. Truncation of the first exon, which appears to regulate c-myc expression, is crucial for tumorigenicity. The human c-myc gene is located at 8q24 on the long arm of chromosome 8
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Genes, c-src -- See Genes, src


Retrovirus-associated DNA sequences (src) originally isolated from the Rous sarcoma virus (RSV). The proto-oncogene src (c-src) codes for a protein that is a member of the tyrosine kinase family and was the first proto-oncogene identified in the human genome. The human c-src gene is located at 20q12-13 on the long arm of chromosome 20
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Genes, Cancer -- See Genes, Neoplasm


Genes whose abnormal expression, or MUTATION are associated with the development, growth, or progression of NEOPLASMS
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Genes, Cancer Suppressor -- See Genes, Tumor Suppressor


Genes that inhibit expression of the tumorigenic phenotype. They are normally involved in holding cellular growth in check. When tumor suppressor genes are inactivated or lost, a barrier to normal proliferation is removed and unregulated growth is possible
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  Genes, cdc -- 3 Related Subjects   3
Genes, cdc : Cell cycle checkpoint control protocols / edited by Howard B. Lieberman  2004 1
 

Genes, Cell Division Cycle -- See Genes, cdc


Genes that code for proteins that regulate the CELL DIVISION CYCLE. These genes form a regulatory network that culminates in the onset of MITOSIS by activating the p34cdc2 protein (PROTEIN P34CDC2)
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Genes -- Congresses : GeNeDis 2018. Genetics and neurodegeneration / Panayiotis Vlamos, editor  2020 1
 

Genes, Developmental -- See Also Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental


Any of the processes by which nuclear, cytoplasmic, or intercellular factors influence the differential control of gene action during the developmental stages of an organism
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Genes, Developmental   2
Genes, Dominant -- physiology : The biology of genetic dominance / edited by Reiner A. Veitia  2006 1
 

Genes, Duplicate -- See Also Multigene Family


A set of genes descended by duplication and variation from some ancestral gene. Such genes may be clustered together on the same chromosome or dispersed on different chromosomes. Examples of multigene families include those that encode the hemoglobins, immunoglobulins, histocompatibility antigens, actins, tubulins, keratins, collagens, heat shock proteins, salivary glue proteins, chorion proteins, cuticle proteins, yolk proteins, and phaseolins, as well as histones, ribosomal RNA, and transfer RNA genes. The latter three are examples of reiterated genes, where hundreds of identical genes are present in a tandem array. (King & Stanfield, A Dictionary of Genetics, 4th ed)
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Genes -- Economic aspects : Bioéthique : méthode et complexité / Ghislaine Cleret de Langavant ; préface d'Edgar Morin  2001 1
 

Genes, Epistatic -- See Epistasis, Genetic


A form of gene interaction whereby the expression of one gene interferes with or masks the expression of a different gene or genes. Genes whose expression interferes with or masks the effects of other genes are said to be epistatic to the effected genes. Genes whose expression is affected (blocked or masked) are hypostatic to the interfering genes
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Genes, erbB : ErbB receptor signaling : methods and protocols / edited by Zhixiang Wang  2017 1
 

Genes, erbB-1 -- See Also ErbB Receptors


A family of structurally-related cell-surface receptors that signal through an intrinsic PROTEIN-TYROSINE KINASE. The receptors are activated upon binding of specific ligands which include EPIDERMAL GROWTH FACTORS, and NEUREGULINS
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  Genes, erbB-2 -- 2 Related Subjects   2
Genes, erbB-2   3
 

Genes, erbb2 -- See Genes, erbB-2


The erbB-2 gene is a proto-oncogene that codes for the erbB-2 receptor (RECEPTOR, ERBB-2), a protein with structural features similar to the epidermal growth factor receptor. Its name originates from the viral oncogene homolog (v-erbB) which is a truncated form of the chicken erbB gene found in the avian erythroblastosis virus. Overexpression and amplification of the gene is associated with a significant number of adenocarcinomas. The human c-erbB-2 gene is located at 17q21.2
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Genes, Essential   2
Genes, Essential -- genetics : Microbial gene essentiality : protocols and bioinformatics / edited by Andrei L. Osterman, Svetlana Y. Gerdes  2008 1
Genes -- ethics : Genes : a philosophical inquiry / Gordon Graham  2002 1
 

Genes Expression -- See Gene expression


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Genes -- Fiction. : The Rapture / Catherine Jinks  2001 1
Genes -- Folklore. : The DNA mystique : the gene as a cultural icon / Dorothy Nelkin, M. Susan Lindee  1995 1
Genes, Fungal : Biotechnology of fungal genes / editor-in-chief, V.K. Gupta ; co-editor, M. Ayyachamy  2012 1
 

Genes, Fungal Mating Type -- See Genes, Mating Type, Fungal


Fungal genes that mostly encode TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS. In some FUNGI they also encode PHEROMONES and PHEROMONE RECEPTORS. The transcription factors control expression of specific proteins that give a cell its mating identity. Opposite mating type identities are required for mating
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Genes -- genetics   2
 

Genes, Growth Suppressor -- See Genes, Tumor Suppressor


Genes that inhibit expression of the tumorigenic phenotype. They are normally involved in holding cellular growth in check. When tumor suppressor genes are inactivated or lost, a barrier to normal proliferation is removed and unregulated growth is possible
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Genes, Ha-ras -- See Genes, ras


Family of retrovirus-associated DNA sequences (ras) originally isolated from Harvey (H-ras, Ha-ras, rasH) and Kirsten (K-ras, Ki-ras, rasK) murine sarcoma viruses. Ras genes are widely conserved among animal species and sequences corresponding to both H-ras and K-ras genes have been detected in human, avian, murine, and non-vertebrate genomes. The closely related N-ras gene has been detected in human neuroblastoma and sarcoma cell lines. All genes of the family have a similar exon-intron structure and each encodes a p21 protein
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Genes, HER-2 -- See Genes, erbB-2


The erbB-2 gene is a proto-oncogene that codes for the erbB-2 receptor (RECEPTOR, ERBB-2), a protein with structural features similar to the epidermal growth factor receptor. Its name originates from the viral oncogene homolog (v-erbB) which is a truncated form of the chicken erbB gene found in the avian erythroblastosis virus. Overexpression and amplification of the gene is associated with a significant number of adenocarcinomas. The human c-erbB-2 gene is located at 17q21.2
  1
 

Genes, HER2 -- See Genes, erbB-2


The erbB-2 gene is a proto-oncogene that codes for the erbB-2 receptor (RECEPTOR, ERBB-2), a protein with structural features similar to the epidermal growth factor receptor. Its name originates from the viral oncogene homolog (v-erbB) which is a truncated form of the chicken erbB gene found in the avian erythroblastosis virus. Overexpression and amplification of the gene is associated with a significant number of adenocarcinomas. The human c-erbB-2 gene is located at 17q21.2
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Genes -- History : In pursuit of the gene : from Darwin to DNA / James Schwartz  2008 1
 

Genes, Homeo Box -- See Genes, Homeobox


Genes that encode highly conserved TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS that control positional identity of cells (BODY PATTERNING) and MORPHOGENESIS throughout development. Their sequences contain a 180 nucleotide sequence designated the homeobox, so called because mutations of these genes often results in homeotic transformations, in which one body structure replaces another. The proteins encoded by homeobox genes are called HOMEODOMAIN PROTEINS
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Genes, Homeobox   4
 

Genes, Homeotic -- See Genes, Homeobox


Genes that encode highly conserved TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS that control positional identity of cells (BODY PATTERNING) and MORPHOGENESIS throughout development. Their sequences contain a 180 nucleotide sequence designated the homeobox, so called because mutations of these genes often results in homeotic transformations, in which one body structure replaces another. The proteins encoded by homeobox genes are called HOMEODOMAIN PROTEINS
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