| AS | antisense S-oligonucleotide |
|---|---|
| AODN | antisense oligodeoxynucleotide |
| antisense |
The aspect of DNA that is responsible for turning off the function of genes.
Ãâó: www.melanomacenter.org/glossary.html
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|---|---|
| antisense |
a piece of nucleic acid, typically created in the lab, which has a sequence exactly opposite to an mRNA molecule made by the body. mRNA molecules made by the body serve as templates for the synthesis of protein (see transcription). Since the "antisense" mRNA molecule binds tightly to its mirror image, it can prevent a particular protein from being made.
Ãâó: www.cs.uu.nl/people/ronnie/local/genome/a.html
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| antisense strand |
Most genetic material, both DNA and RNA, appears as two chains or strands of nucleotides wound together into a double helix - the common picture of DNA. Each nucleotide - A, T, C and G - has an attractive opposite (A attracts T, C attracts G). As a result, one strand, the "sense" strand, contains the information (for example, ATG-AAA) and the other strand, the "antisense" strand contains the opposite of this information (TAC-TTT - according to the pairing rules). ...
Ãâó: www.epidemic.org/glossaryText/glossaryA-B.html
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| antisense |
the complementary strand of DNA or RNA coding sequence, which pairs with a specific messenger RNA blocking it from being translated into protein and serving to inhibit gene function.
Ãâó: www.cardiogenetics.org/glossary.asp
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| antisense |
a strand of DNA having sequence to messenger ribonucleic acid (in our case RNA, this method is used frequently in gene therapy. A gene which causes a disease is replaced by a gene lacking the code for the disease. The new gene is introduced into the cells using vectors, and the old DNA will incorporate the new information).
Ãâó: student.biology.arizona.edu/honors96/group17/gloss...
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