Finding the location of a
gene or
gene product by adding specific radioactive or chemically tagged
probes for the
gene and detecting the location of the radioactivity or chemical on the
chromosome or in the
cell after
hybridization.
Full article >>>in situ
hybridizationlocating a
gene by adding specific radioactive
probes for the
gene and detecting the location of the radioactivity on the
chromosome after
hybridization ...
Full article >>>Written in 1865 by Gregor
Mendel, Experiments on
Plant Hybridization was the result after years spent studying genetic
traits in pea
plants.
Full article >>>Hybridization conditions: higher the
stringency, lower the
probability of
hybridization. Increase the temperature or decreasing the salt concentration raises the
stringency.
Related
Hybridization Melting temperature ...
Full article >>>HybridizationThe process of joining two
complementary
strands of
DNA or one each of
DNA and
RNA to form a double-
stranded
molecule. One
strand is often labeled and used as a
probe to detect the presence of the second
strand. Cf.
hybrid.
Full article >>>Hybridization between different
species often yields infertile
offspring. [Link to a discussion of this postzygotic isolating mechanism.]s But in
plants, this does not necessarily doom the
offspring.
Full article >>>Hybridization Technology Development at the Resource for Molecular
CytogeneticsH.-U. Weier, C. Thompson, M. Wang, K. Greulich, C. Collins, J. Gray and D. Pinkel ...
Full article >>>Hybridization A technique where a
denatured (single-
stranded)
nucleotide chain (
DNA or
RNA) is allowed to pair with another single-
stranded
nucleotide chain.
Full article >>>Hybridization is effective
pollination between
flowers of different
species of the same
genus, or even between
flowers of different genera (as in the case of several orchids).
Full article >>>Hybridization. The
hydrogen bonding of
complementary DNA and/or
RNA sequences to form a duplex
molecule. (See
Northern hybridization, Southern
hybridization.) ...
Full article >>>HYBRIDIZATION - The process of
base pairing leading to formation of duplex
RNA or
DNA or
RNA-
DNA molecules.
Full article >>>Hybridization: The re
action by which the pairing of
complementary
strands of
nucleic acid occurs.
DNA is usually double-
stranded, and when the
strands are separated they will re-
hybridize under the appropriate conditions.
Full article >>>A
hybridization technique that enables researchers to determine the presence of certain
nucleotide sequences in a sample of
DNA.
specialized ...
Full article >>>DNA hybridization The formation of
hybrid DNA molecules that contain a
strand of
DNA from two different
species. The number of
complementary sequences in common in the two
strands is an indication of the degree of relatedness of the
species.
Full article >>>In-situ
hybridization is a process that allows us to see which
cells are
expressing a particular m
RNA. The way we do that is we make a
probe that is similar to that m
RNA, but it's an anti-
sense probe.
Full article >>>in situ
hybridization - detection of the location of
nucleic acid sequences in a
cell or
organism.
inducer gene -
gene encoding the
repressor protein of the lac
operon; when lactose binds the
repressor protein, the lac
operon is induced.
Full article >>>(Redirected from
Hybridization)
In
genetics,
hybridisation is the process of mixing different
species or varieties of
organisms.
In
molecular biology hybridisation is the process of joining two
complementary
strands of
DNA.
Full article >>>chromosome,
gene,
hybridization,
mapping[ Send this term to a friend ] [ Suggest a term for the glossary ]
See Also: ...
Full article >>>DNA renaturation (
hybridization) - process whereby two
complementary
nucleic acid strands form a
double helix during an
annealing period; a powerful technique for detecting specific
nucleotide sequences ...
Full article >>>Speciation through
hybridization and/or
polyploidy has
long been considered much less important in
animals than in
plants [[[refs.]]]. A number of reviews suggest that this view may be mistaken.
Full article >>>Cross-
hybridization. The
hydrogen bonding of a single-
stranded
DNA sequence that is partially but not entirely
complementary to a singlestranded
substrate.
Full article >>>DNA hybridization -- a technique for selectively binding specific
segments of single-
stranded (ss)
DNA or
RNA by
base pairing to
complementary sequences on ss
DNA molecules that are trapped on a nitro
cellulose filter.
Full article >>>Southern blot A
DNA hybridization procedure in which specific
DNA fragments are detected in a mixture by means of a
complementary, labeled
nucleic acid probe.
Full article >>>In most NFT-bearing
neurons, we observed a strong
reduction in acetylated a-
tubulin immunoreactivity (a
marker of stable
microtubules) and a
reduction of the in situ
hybridization signal for
tubulin m
RNA.
Full article >>>The blot was
probed by
hybridization with a
cloned fragment of the tree's
genome.
For this particular combination of
restriction enzyme and
hybridization probe, the pattern of
hybridizing bands shown above was obtained.
Full article >>>FISH (fluorescence in situ
hybridization): A
mapping technique that uses fluorescent tags to identify specific locations of
chromosomes.
Full article >>>reticulation -- Joining of separate
lineages on a
phylogenetic tree, generally through
hybridization or through
lateral gene transfer. Fairly common in certain land
plant clades; reticulation is thought to be rare among
metazoans.
Full article >>>gene flow An exchange of genes between two
populations of a
species, or in extreme cases, between
populations of two
species (
hybridization).
Full article >>>'"/>