Chromosomes
in sentence
64 examples of Chromosomes in a sentence
I saw beyond the genes and the
chromosomes
into the lives of the real people we were studying.
We all have XX chromosomes, right?
If it's not just about our chromosomes, then what is being a woman about?
There's 23
chromosomes.
Let's now start using a telescope version, but instead of using a telescope, let's use a microscope to zoom in on the inferior of those chromosomes, which is the Y chromosome.
And Schrodinger said the essence was information present in our chromosomes, and it had to be present on a molecule.
You know chromosomes, but this was a molecule, and somehow all the information was probably present in some digital form.
He was trained as a physicist, and after the war he wanted to do biophysics, and he picked DNA because DNA had been determined at the Rockefeller Institute to possibly be the genetic molecules on the
chromosomes.
We saw one autistic kid, about five million bases just missing from one of his
chromosomes.
You know you have 46
chromosomes.
Cell loss, mutations in chromosomes, mutations in the mitochondria and so on.
The DNA is organized in words, call them: genes and
chromosomes.
The way I suspect it will happen is using artificial
chromosomes
and extra chromosomes, so we go from 46 to 47 or 48.
It reassembles its genome after this radiation burst in about 12 to 24 hours, after its
chromosomes
are literally blown apart.
Within a short while, I think there's going to be a new field called "Combinatorial Genomics," because with these new synthesis capabilities, these vast gene array repertoires and the homologous recombination, we think we can design a robot to make maybe a million different
chromosomes
a day.
Potatoes, potatoes have 48
chromosomes.
There's no molecular test, there's no sequencing of genes that was referred to yesterday, there's no fancy looking at the
chromosomes.
And sitting next to that water in the cores was this little Deinococcus radiodurans, doing a backstroke, having its
chromosomes
blown apart every day, six, seven times, restitching them, living in about 200 times the radiation that would kill you.
This is one of your
chromosomes.
We had two teams working in parallel: one team on the chemistry, and the other on trying to be able to transplant entire
chromosomes
to get new cells.
And we knew, once that worked, that we actually had a chance if we could make the synthetic
chromosomes
to do the same with those.
It's an amazing step forward, but we had a problem because now we had the bacterial
chromosomes
growing in yeast.
So our team developed new techniques for actually growing, cloning entire bacterial
chromosomes
in yeast.
And we thought this would be a great test bed for learning how to get
chromosomes
out of yeast and transplant them.
i do not know how many
chromosomes
a Wamp Rat has or the extended family of TK427.
But, I guess since she has big eyes and 2 x chromosomes, then that makes it okay?
Genetically modified mice either lack a specific gene or gene-pair (knock-out mice) or carry a piece of foreign DNA integrated into their own
chromosomes
(transgenic mice), and are used to deduce the functions of particular genes.
Every cell in your body (except mature red blood cells) – there are about 50 trillion in an adult – contains copies of your DNA, which are coiled up tightly to form 46 separate bundles called
chromosomes.
These
chromosomes
are stored in the core of the cell (nucleus), and there are 22 matching pairs, one of each pair from each of your biological parents, plus an X-chromosome from your mother and either an X- or Y-chromosome from your father;XX makes you a girl and XY a boy.
Sickle-cell anemia is what geneticists call an autosomal recessive disease, which means that an affected individual has inherited a defective hemoglobin gene from both parents, so that every one of his or her sets of
chromosomes
carries a defective gene.
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