| PCr | phosphocreatinine |
|---|---|
| PCR | plasma clearance rate |
| PCR | polimerase chain reaction method |
| PCR | polymerase chain reaction technique |
| PCR | transcriptase)-polymerase chain reaction |
| PCR | transcription-polymerase chain reaction |
| PCR-DGGE | Polymerase chain reaction-denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis |
| PCR-EIA | polymerase chain reaction enzyme immunoassay |
| PCR-RFLP | PCR restriction fragment length polymorphisms |
| PCR-RFLP | Polymerase Chain Reaction-Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism |
| PCR |
the first practical system for in vitro amplification of DNA, and as such one of the most important recent developments in molecular biology.
Ãâó: www.amnh.org/exhibitions/epidemic/glossary.html
|
|---|---|
| PCR |
polymerase chain reaction - a method of producing large amounts of a specific segment of DNA in the laboratory, by incubating a template DNA with primer DNA and adding a polymerase enzyme. Also see cDNA.
Ãâó: www.qimr.edu.au/qimr_glossary.html
|
| PCR |
A highly sophisticated scientific method of detecting the presence of hepatitis B virus DNA or hepatitis C virus RNA in the blood. This test can be conducted on the same sample of blood obtained with the hepatitis B panel of blood tests; no extra doctor
Ãâó: www.hepb.org/hepb/glossary.htm
|
| PCR |
Polymerase Chain Reaction; a technique for amplifying DNA, making it easier to isolate, clone and sequence.
Ãâó: www.inproteomics.com/nwglospq.html
|
| PCR |
a method for creating millions of copies of a particular segment of DNA. If a scientist needs to detect the presence of a very small amount of a particular DNA sequence, PCR can be used to amplify the amount of that sequence until there are enough copies available to be detected.
Ãâó: www.food.gov.uk/science/ouradvisors/toxicity/cotme...
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