Electrophoresis
A method of separating large molecules (such as DNA fragments or proteins) from a mixture of similar molecules. An electric current is passed through a medium containing the mixture, and each kind of molecule travels through the medium at a different rate, depending on its electrical charge and size. Agarose and acrylamide gels are the media commonly used for electrophoresis of proteins and nucleic acids.
A process using high-voltage current to make cell membranes permeable to allow the introduction of new DNA; commonly used in recombinant DNA technology.
See also: transfection
An embryonic cell that can replicate indefinitely, transform into other types of cells, and serve as a continuous source of new cells.
See: restriction enzyme
A protein that acts as a catalyst, speeding the rate at which a biochemical reaction proceeds but not altering the direction or nature of the reaction.
One gene interfers with or prevents the expression of another gene located at a different locus.
Common bacterium that has been studied intensively by geneticists because of its small genome size, normal lack of pathogenicity, and ease of growth in the laboratory.
The study of improving a species by artificial selection; usually refers to the selective breeding of humans.
Cell or organism with membrane-bound, structurally discrete nucleus and other well-developed subcellular compartments. Eukaryotes include all organisms except viruses, bacteria, and bluegreen algae.
See also: prokaryote, chromosome.
See: conserved sequence
DNA originating outside an organism that has been introducted into the organism.
The protein-coding DNA sequence of a gene.
See also: intron
An enzyme that cleaves nucleotides sequentially from free ends of a linear nucleic acid substrate.
See: gene expression
A short strand of DNA that is a part of a cDNA molecule and can act as identifier of a gene. Used in locating and mapping genes.
See also: cDNA, sequence tagged site