9780120176465-0120176467-Homology Effects (Volume 46) (Advances in Genetics, Volume 46)

Homology Effects (Volume 46) (Advances in Genetics, Volume 46)

ISBN-13: 9780120176465
ISBN-10: 0120176467
Edition: 1
Author: Jay C. Dunlap, C-ting Wu
Publication date: 2002
Publisher: Academic Press
Format: Hardcover 540 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780120176465
ISBN-10: 0120176467
Edition: 1
Author: Jay C. Dunlap, C-ting Wu
Publication date: 2002
Publisher: Academic Press
Format: Hardcover 540 pages

Summary

Homology Effects (Volume 46) (Advances in Genetics, Volume 46) (ISBN-13: 9780120176465 and ISBN-10: 0120176467), written by authors Jay C. Dunlap, C-ting Wu, was published by Academic Press in 2002. With an overall rating of 4.2 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent Homology Effects (Volume 46) (Advances in Genetics, Volume 46) (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

Homology Effects offers contributions from an international panel of researchers whose aim has been both to introduce newcomers to the field of homology effects, and to bring colleagues up to date. Topic coverage includes dosage compensation, X-inactivation, imprinting, paramutation, homology-dependent gene silencing, transvection, pairing-sensitive silencing, nuclear organization of chromosomes, DNA repair, quelling, RIP, RNAi and antisense biology, homology effects in ciliates, prion biology, and a discourse on the evolution of gene duplications. Advances in Genetics presents an eclectic mix of articles of use to all human and molecular geneticists. They are written and edited by recognized leaders in the field and make this an essential series of books for anyone in the genetics field.Homology, the examination of similarity due to shared common ancestry, encompasses a fascinating class of phenomena in mammals, plants, insects, ciliates, nematodes, fungi, and bacteria. Homology effects concern processes that recognize homology at the level of DNA and/or RNA, as well as at the level of protein. Their collective history begins at the turn of the century and includes some of the most puzzling and extraordinary observations in biology. The volume covers phenomena that have often been considered unusual, exceptional to the rule, and "out of the ordinary" and, therefore, not for general study. However, it is now becoming clear that taken together, these phenomena represent a class of regulatory mechanisms that are widespread, as well as exceptionally powerful.
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