| sense 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/glossaryP-S.html
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| sense |
Sense is that part of a system that can receive communications from the environment.
Ãâó: www.intelligent-systems.com.ar/intsyst/glossary.ht...
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| sense |
http://www.sense.org.uk/
Ãâó: www.ssc.mhie.ac.uk/pubs/cpvi/gloss.html
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| sense e. |
neuroepithelium (def. 1).
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
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| sense o.’s |
organa sensuum. See under organum.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
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| sense | a motivating awareness of ethical responsibility |
|---|---|
| sense | the faculty of smell |
| sense | the faculty of taste |
| sense | the opinion held by the majority of those present at the meeting |
| sense | the faculty of touch |
| sense | an organ having nerve endings (in the skin or viscera or eye or ear or nose or mouth) that respond to stimulation |
| sense | detected by instinct or inference rather than by recognized perceptual cues |
| sense | (of especially persons) lacking sense or understanding or judgment |
| sense | unresponsive to stimulation |
| sense | lacking import |
| sense | not marked by the use of reason |
| sense | in an unreasonably senseless manner |
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