| splicing |
splice: a junction where two things (as paper or film or magnetic tape) have been joined together; "the break was due to an imperfect splice"
Ãâó: wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn
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| splicing |
Splicing involves using the strands of a rope to make an alteration, be it to join two lengths of rope together more cleanly than tying a knot or doubling a rope back onto itself to form an eye (a bight or loop) or an end that will not fray. To splice a rope the strands at the end of the rope in question are prised apart and then woven into the strands at another point, or into the strands of a different rope altogether. ...
Ãâó: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Splicing_(rope)
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| splicing |
During the maturation of eukaryotic mRNA, the process that eliminates intervening intron sequences and covalently joins exon sequences of RNA. cf split gene; exon; guide sequence. In recombinant DNA technology, the term refers to the latter of the two processes just described, namely joining fragments of DNA together. See gene splicing.
Ãâó: www.fao.org/docrep/003/X3910E/X3910E22.htm
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| splicing |
The covalent linkage of DNA by DNA ligase; the process by which the spliceosome excises introns from RNA; the post-translation cleavage and ligation process that results in the excision of a protein intein and ligation of the ends created to form an extei
Ãâó: www.genpromag.com/Glossary~LETTER~S.html
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| splicing |
the removal of introns from messenger RNA and the fusion of exons to form the final template for protein synthesis.
Ãâó: www.uvm.edu/~cgep/Education/Glossary.html
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