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insertion a. the electrical activity caused by insertion or movement of a needle electrode; it is prolonged in neuropathies and myopathies and is diminished in some metabolic disorders.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
insertion s. a small bacterial transposon, approximately 1000 bases long, with a short run of inverted repeated sequences at its termini, it causes duplication of the recipient DNA site into which it inserts, one copy of the recipient DNA flanking it on each side.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
insertion The addition of a piece of genetic material in a place where it is not normally found. An insertion can be large and result in a chromosomal abnormality. It can also be a smaller addition of one or more base pairs and alter the function of a single gene. This may result in a disorder, because the genetic code may then be read incorrectly.
Ãâó: hganj.org/Glossary.htm
insertion A type of translocation in which an interstitial segment from one chromosome (resulting from two breaks) is inserted within a nonhomologous chromosome at a third breakpoint. A transgene insertion involves genetic material derived from another organism, introduced by pronuclear microinjection of DNA or incorporation of exogenous DNA by embryonic stem cells (either by viral infection or electroporation), and incorporated into a host chromosome at a random or targeted location.
Ãâó: lsd.ornl.gov/mouse/Search-pulldownglossary.htmlx
insertion The site of attachment of a muscle to the bone. Also considered the more moveable attachment.
Ãâó: www.whitworth.edu/Academic/Department/Kinesiology&...
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