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Mark   Year Entries
DNA damage -- Laboratory manuals.   2
DNA Damage -- physiology   5
DNA damage -- Prevention. : Feed your genes right : eat to turn off disease-causing genes and slow down aging / Jack Challem  2005 1
DNA damage -- Research -- Methodology   2
DNA damage -- Testing   3
 

DNA Damages -- See DNA Damage


Injuries to DNA that introduce deviations from its normal, intact structure and which may, if left unrepaired, result in a MUTATION or a block of DNA REPLICATION. These deviations may be caused by physical or chemical agents and occur by natural or unnatural, introduced circumstances. They include the introduction of illegitimate bases during replication or by deamination or other modification of bases; the loss of a base from the DNA backbone leaving an abasic site; single-strand breaks; double strand breaks; and intrastrand (PYRIMIDINE DIMERS) or interstrand crosslinking. Damage can often be repaired (DNA REPAIR). If the damage is extensive, it can induce APOPTOSIS
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DNA Data Bank -- See Databases, Nucleic Acid


Databases containing information about NUCLEIC ACIDS such as BASE SEQUENCE; SNPS; NUCLEIC ACID CONFORMATION; and other properties. Information about the DNA fragments kept in a GENE LIBRARY or GENOMIC LIBRARY is often maintained in DNA databases
  1
 

DNA Data Bank of Japan -- See Databases, Nucleic Acid


Databases containing information about NUCLEIC ACIDS such as BASE SEQUENCE; SNPS; NUCLEIC ACID CONFORMATION; and other properties. Information about the DNA fragments kept in a GENE LIBRARY or GENOMIC LIBRARY is often maintained in DNA databases
  1
 

DNA Data Banks -- See Databases, Nucleic Acid


Databases containing information about NUCLEIC ACIDS such as BASE SEQUENCE; SNPS; NUCLEIC ACID CONFORMATION; and other properties. Information about the DNA fragments kept in a GENE LIBRARY or GENOMIC LIBRARY is often maintained in DNA databases
  1
DNA data banks.   8
DNA data banks -- Congresses. : Bioinformatics : from nucleic acids and proteins to cell metabolism : contributions to the conference on "Bioinformatics," October 9 to 11, 1995, Braunschweig, Germany / edited by Dietmar Schomburg, Uta Lessel  1995 1
DNA data banks -- Cross-cultural studies.   2
DNA data banks -- Europe : Genetic surveillance and crime control : social, cultural and political perspectives / Helen Machado & Rafaela Granja  2022 1
DNA data banks -- Law and legislation.   3
DNA data banks -- Law and legislation -- Australia.   2
DNA data banks -- Law and legislation -- Australia -- New South Wales. : People with cognitive and mental health impairments in the criminal justice system : forensic samples / New South Wales Law Reform Commission  2010 1
DNA data banks -- Law and legislation -- United States : 60 minutes. Banking on DNA / produced by Robert G. Anderson  1999 1
DNA data banks -- Moral and ethical aspects   2
DNA data banks -- Security measures : Biomedical defense principles to counter DNA deep hacking / Rocky Termanini  2023 1
DNA -- Data processing   2
 

DNA Databank -- See Databases, Nucleic Acid


Databases containing information about NUCLEIC ACIDS such as BASE SEQUENCE; SNPS; NUCLEIC ACID CONFORMATION; and other properties. Information about the DNA fragments kept in a GENE LIBRARY or GENOMIC LIBRARY is often maintained in DNA databases
  1
  DNA Databanks -- 2 Related Subjects   2
 

DNA Database -- See Databases, Nucleic Acid


Databases containing information about NUCLEIC ACIDS such as BASE SEQUENCE; SNPS; NUCLEIC ACID CONFORMATION; and other properties. Information about the DNA fragments kept in a GENE LIBRARY or GENOMIC LIBRARY is often maintained in DNA databases
  1
  DNA Databases -- 2 Related Subjects   2
 

DNA-Dependent Adenosinetriphosphatases -- See Adenosine Triphosphatases


A group of enzymes which catalyze the hydrolysis of ATP. The hydrolysis reaction is usually coupled with another function such as transporting Ca(2+) across a membrane. These enzymes may be dependent on Ca(2+), Mg(2+), anions, H+, or DNA
  1
 

DNA-Dependent ATPase -- See Adenosine Triphosphatases


A group of enzymes which catalyze the hydrolysis of ATP. The hydrolysis reaction is usually coupled with another function such as transporting Ca(2+) across a membrane. These enzymes may be dependent on Ca(2+), Mg(2+), anions, H+, or DNA
  1
  DNA-Dependent DNA Polymerases -- 2 Related Subjects   2
 

DNA-Dependent RNA Polymerase II -- See RNA Polymerase II


A DNA-dependent RNA polymerase present in bacterial, plant, and animal cells. It functions in the nucleoplasmic structure and transcribes DNA into RNA. It has different requirements for cations and salt than RNA polymerase I and is strongly inhibited by alpha-amanitin. EC 2.7.7.6
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  DNA-Dependent RNA Polymerases -- 2 Related Subjects   2
DNA -- Derivatives   4
DNA -- Diagnostic use -- Periodicals. : Molecular diagnosis & therapy  2006- 1
DNA -- Dictionaries.   2
DNA-Directed DNA Polymerase   6
 

DNA-directed DNA polymerases -- See DNA polymerases


  1
 

DNA-Directed RNA Polymerase -- See DNA-Directed RNA Polymerases


Enzymes that catalyze DNA template-directed extension of the 3'-end of an RNA strand one nucleotide at a time. They can initiate a chain de novo. In eukaryotes, three forms of the enzyme have been distinguished on the basis of sensitivity to alpha-amanitin, and the type of RNA synthesized. (From Enzyme Nomenclature, 1992)
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DNA-directed RNA polymerases -- See RNA polymerases


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DNA-Directed RNA Polymerases   7
DNA-Directed RNA Polymerases -- analysis. : RNA polymerase and associated factors / edited by Sankar Adhya  c1996- 1
DNA-Directed RNA Polymerases -- genetics. : RNA polymerase and associated factors / edited by Sankar Adhya  c1996- 1
 

DNA, Double-Stranded -- See DNA


A deoxyribonucleotide polymer that is the primary genetic material of all cells. Eukaryotic and prokaryotic organisms normally contain DNA in a double-stranded state, yet several important biological processes transiently involve single-stranded regions. DNA, which consists of a polysugar-phosphate backbone possessing projections of purines (adenine and guanine) and pyrimidines (thymine and cytosine), forms a double helix that is held together by hydrogen bonds between these purines and pyrimidines (adenine to thymine and guanine to cytosine)
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DNA -- Drama.   3
DNA -- drug effects   5
DNA-drug interactions.   9
DNA -- economics : Owning the genome : a moral analysis of DNA patenting / David B. Resnik  2004 1
DNA -- Evolution.   5
DNA -- Fiction. : Honk if you are Jesus / Peter Goldsworthy  1992 1
 

DNA Fingerprint -- See DNA Fingerprinting


A technique for identifying individuals of a species that is based on the uniqueness of their DNA sequence. Uniqueness is determined by identifying which combination of allelic variations occur in the individual at a statistically relevant number of different loci. In forensic studies, RESTRICTION FRAGMENT LENGTH POLYMORPHISM of multiple, highly polymorphic VNTR LOCI or MICROSATELLITE REPEAT loci are analyzed. The number of loci used for the profile depends on the ALLELE FREQUENCY in the population
  1
  DNA Fingerprinting -- 3 Related Subjects   3
DNA fingerprinting.   142
DNA fingerprinting -- Atlases : Forensic DNA collection at death scenes : a pictorial guide / Rhonda Williams, Roger Kahn  2014 1
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