| homology |
Two anatomical structures or behavioural traits within different organisms which originated from a structure or trait of their common ancestral organism. The structures or traits in their current forms may not necessarily perform the same functions in each organism, nor perform the functions it did in the common ancestor. They may even have become completely unused and therefore vestigial.
Ãâó: home.comcast.net/~bkrentzman/glossary2.html
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| homologous series |
A series of similar organic compounds, differing only in that the next higher member of the series has an additional CH2 group (one carbon atom and two hydrogen atoms) in its molecular structure. Fuel oils are characterised by the presence of an identifiable homologous series of normal alkanes.
Ãâó: www.fire.org.uk/glossary.htm
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| homologue |
homologous: Used by geneticists in two different senses: (1) one member of a chromosome pair in diploid organisms, and (2) a gene from one species - -for example, the mouse - -that has a common origin and functions the same as a gene from another species -- for example, humans, Drosophila, or yeast. [NHLBI] Related terms lateral genomics, ortholog, orthologous, paralog, paralogous, synologous, xenolog, xenologous; Structural genomics glossary homology modeling
Ãâó: www.bioon.com/book/biology/genomicglossaries/funct...
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| homology |
The relationship among sequences due to descent from a common ancestral sequence. An important organizing principle for genomic studies because structural and functional similarities tend to change together along the structure of homology relationships. When applied to nucleotide or protein sequences, means relationship due to descent from a common ancestral sequence. ...
Ãâó: www.bioon.com/book/biology/genomicglossaries/funct...
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| homology |
similarity of features based on common descent.
Ãâó: www.csupomona.edu/~jcclark/classes/bio406/glossary...
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