Similar words: phenomenology, phenomenon, genomics, phenomena, phenomenal, phenomenally, splenomegaly, venom. Meaning: ['dʒɪːnəʊm] n. the ordering of genes in a haploid set of chromosomes of a particular organism; the full DNA sequence of an organism.
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1. Wild type and deleted mitochondrial genome maps.
2. Genome: the genetic complement of a living organism.
3. The human genome bears witness to this process, too.
4. Human Genome Sciences gain boosted shares of other biotechnology companies, many of which are based in southern Maryland.
5. The potential for abuse and misuse of genome and cloning technology has always been a quiet threat.
6. Firing alien genes into a different genome is exactly the same thing as introducing exotic species into a foreign eco-system.
7. But the argument is that the genome is public property -- it needs a different structure of ownership.
8. The first step in genome expression, i.e. transcription, was studied in order to test these hypotheses.
9. Proponents of the Human Genome Project imagine great progress in diagnosis of diseases and in their therapy.
10. Genome Therapeutics Corp., which develops therapies based on genetics, had a 300 percent return.
11. On other occasions, the genome seems to rearrange itself for its own ends.
12. Once the entire human genome has been mapped and sequenced it will become amenable to manipulation.
13. The Human Genome Project was launched in 1990 and is due for completion in 2005.
14. The complete genome replicates in twenty minutes-whereas it takes hours in somatic cells.
15. The publication of the research may puzzle those who thought that the race to the human genome was over last June.
16. YACs 229C7 and 223E11 do not contain DNA from this region of the genome.
17. This sequence of events may represent a model for the dispersal of gene family members throughout the genome.
18. The mammalian gut has been stable for many millennia and acts to constrain the flexibility of E. coli's genome.
19. This drosophila strain is an interesting model to study the consequence of this type of mitochondrial genome deletion.
20. Most are now inactive, but when they first arrived they were able to hop from place to place in our genome.
21. Hence, there was an increase in the number of mitochondrial genomes per nuclear genome in the mutant strain.
21. Sentencedict.com is a online sentence dictionary, on which you can find excellent sentences for a large number of words.
22. For the last 20 years researchers have been able to calculate genome sizes and mutation rates.
23. In the late 1980s, the United States embarked on a major undertaking: the human genome project.
24. Many knowledgeable people have a deep dislike of the Human Genome Project.
25. There might also be mistaken matches with the many duplicated regions of the human genome.
26. Billions of dollars will have been poured into the human genome project.
27. Another mechanism, called transposition, can also increase the frequency of one variant through the genome.
28. In the late 1980s, the US embarked on a major undertaking: the human genome project.
29. Hubbard agrees that it ought to be possible to overlay the mouse on the human genome.
30. Celera announced this week that it had finished sequencing the genome of that laboratory workhorse, the mouse.
More similar words: phenomenology, phenomenon, genomics, phenomena, phenomenal, phenomenally, splenomegaly, venom, adenoma, envenom, venomous, antivenom, denominator, genotype, denomination, gnome, genocide, exogenous, genocidal, adenocarcinoma, monomer, endogenous, homogenous, indigenous, misnomer, nondenominational, by no means, metronome, nanometer, indigenously.