The reconstruction of a continuous two-stranded DNA molecule without mismatch from a molecule which contained damaged regions. The major repair mechanisms are excision repair, in which defective regions in one strand are excised and resynthesized using the complementary base pairing information in the intact strand; photoreactivation repair, in which the lethal and mutagenic effects of ultraviolet light are eliminated; and post-replication repair, in which the primary lesions are not repaired, but the gaps in one daughter duplex are filled in by incorporation of portions of the other (undamaged) daughter duplex. Excision repair and post-replication repair are sometimes referred to as "dark repair" because they do not require light
Techniques of nucleotide sequence analysis that increase the range, complexity, sensitivity, and accuracy of results by greatly increasing the scale of operations and thus the number of nucleotides, and the number of copies of each nucleotide sequenced. The sequencing may be done by analysis of the synthesis or ligation products, hybridization to preexisting sequences, etc
Nucleotides -- chemistry : Tetrahymena and human telomerase enzymes : model and dynamics of processive nucleotide and repeat addition translocations / Ping Xie
Nucleotides, Cyclic -- metabolism. : Initiation and termination of cyclic nucleotide action / edited by Jackie D. Corbin, Roger A. Johnson
1988
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Nucleotides, Cyclic -- physiology : Cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases in health and disease / edited by Joseph A. Beavo, Sharron H. Francis, Miles D. Houslay
2007
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Nucleotides -- Derivatives : Nucleoside triphosphates and their analogs : chemistry, biotechnology, and biological applications / [edited by] Morteza M. Vaghefi
2005
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Nucleotides -- Laboratory manuals : Tandem repeats in genes, proteins, and disease : methods and protocols / edited by Danny M. Hatters, Anthony J. Hannan
2013
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Nucleotides -- Metabolism : Plant nucleotide metabolism : biosynthesis, degradation, and alkaloid formation / Hiroshi Ashihara, Ochanomizu University, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo, Japan, Iziar A. Ludwig, University Rovira I, Virgili, Reus, Spain, Alan Crozier, University of California, Davis, CA, USA, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK
Large mass of nuclei forming the most caudal portion of the THALAMUS and overhanging the GENICULATE BODIES and the dorsolateral surface of the MIDBRAIN. It is divided into four parts: the lateral, medial, inferior, and oral pulvinar nuclei
Within a eukaryotic cell, a membrane-limited body which contains chromosomes and one or more nucleoli (CELL NUCLEOLUS). The nuclear membrane consists of a double unit-type membrane which is perforated by a number of pores; the outermost membrane is continuous with the ENDOPLASMIC RETICULUM. A cell may contain more than one nucleus. (From Singleton & Sainsbury, Dictionary of Microbiology and Molecular Biology, 2d ed)
Large mass of nuclei forming the most caudal portion of the THALAMUS and overhanging the GENICULATE BODIES and the dorsolateral surface of the MIDBRAIN. It is divided into four parts: the lateral, medial, inferior, and oral pulvinar nuclei