Showing posts with label GENETICS CODE CRACKING. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GENETICS CODE CRACKING. Show all posts

DNA fingerprint - Definitions.


DNA fingerprinting is a way of identifying a specific individual, rather than simply identifying a species or some particular trait. It is also known as genetic fingerprinting or DNA profiling. As a technology, it has been around since at least 1985, when it was announced by its inventor, Sir Alec Jeffreys. DNA fingerprinting is currently used both for identifying paternity or maternity and for identifying criminals or victims. There is discussion of using DNA fingerprinting as a sort of personal identifier as well, although the viability of this is debatable.
The vast majority of a human's DNA will match exactly that of any other human, making distinguishing between two people rather difficult. DNA fingerprinting uses a specific type of DNA sequence, known as a microsatellite, to make identification much easier. Microsatellites are short pieces of DNA which repeat many times in a given person's DNA. In a given area, microsatellites tend to be highly variable, making them ideal for DNA fingerprinting. By comparing a number of microsatellites in a given area, one can identify a person relatively easily.



The sections of DNA used in DNA fingerprinting, although highly variable, are passed down from parents to their children. Although not all of the sections will necessarily be passed on, no child has pairs that their parents do not have. This means that by comparing large groups of these sections, paternity, maternity, or even both, may be determined. DNA fingerprinting has a high success rate and a very low false-positive rate, making it an extremely popular form of paternity and maternity verification.
In forensics, DNA fingerprinting is very attractive because it doesn't require actual fingerprints, which may or may not be left behind, and may or may not be obscured. Because all of the DNA sections are contained in every cell, any piece of a person's body, from a strand of hair to a skin follicle to a drop of blood, may be used to identify them using DNA fingerprinting. This is useful in the case of identifying a criminal, because even a drop of blood or skin left at the crime scene may be enough to establish innocence or guilt, and it is virtually impossible to remove all physical trace of one's presence. DNA fingerprinting is useful in the case of identifying victims because even in cases where the body may be disfigured past identification, and teeth or other identifying features may be destroyed, all it takes is a single cell for positive identification.

DNA fingerprinting is by no means perfect, however. It cannot establish beyond the shadow of a doubt that a specific cell comes from a specific person; it can only establish a probability. In many cases this probability is very high -- one in ten billion, for example -- but in some cases it may be much lower. The probability also becomes obscured when dealing with direct descendents, who may share a large portion of the examined areas of DNA with a parent.

Despite these problems, DNA fingerprinting is becoming more and more prevalent in the world of criminal forensics. Though some legal questions exist, such as the conclusiveness of DNA fingerprinting and the extent to which it is legal by national laws to compile databases of people's DNA and to take samples of their DNA for comparison, the benefits currently seem to outweigh the problems. 


FOR MORE INFORMATION VISIT ..http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-dna-fingerprinting.htm 

DNA GENE DECODING SITES

Hello and welcome back to the world of genetics - "ALL ABOUT DNA AND RNA". As you already know that what is called "GENE DECODING".

GENE DECODING USING MUSHROOM
 
Mushrooms are aperitive but sometimes they can be added than that. That's why a aggregation at the University of Warwick is co-ordinating a all-around accomplishment to accomplish the genome sequencing of the best important mushrooms for the westerners: button or accepted augment (Agaricus bisporus).

Decoding the abiogenetic accomplish up of the mushrooms could advance to the processing of biofuels, abutment the accomplishment to administer all-around carbon and advice cleanse
heavy metals from attenuated soils.

The Agaricus mushrooma are awful able "secondary decomposers" of bulb actual like asleep leaves and litter, breaking afar the actual that is too boxy for added fungi and bacilli to attack. The capital botheration with the actinic is the lignin, abounding in asleep bulb actual and whose abasement by fungi and bacilli is not acutely understood.

By mapping the genes of the mushroom, advisers achievement to ascertain the genes amenable for this process. This abstracts will be acutely important to advisers and engineers attractive to access the cardinal of bulb abstracts to be acclimated for accomplishing biofuels, but additionally the process' effectiveness.

The augment is additionally important for compassionate the carbon cycling. Carbon is stored in soils as bulb amoebic matter. 1-2 gigatons of carbon are annually retained in pools on acreage in the abstemious and algid regions of the earth, apery 15-30% of the annual all-around emissions of carbon from deposit fuels and automated activities. Compassionate the role of the fungi in the accepted carbon cycling in the forests and added ecosystems is acute for optimizing carbon management.

Still, some Agaricus breed can hyper-accumulate baneful metals in soils at abundant college levels than added fungi genera. Compassionate this action would advance the use of these fungi for the bioremediation of attenuated soils. Agaricus bisporus is the world's best broadly able augment breed and from this analysis the best benefited categories will be the growers and consumers, due to bigger qualities like ache resistance, aftertaste and productivity.

Agaricus bisporus possesses about 35 megabases of abiogenetic advice coding for about 11,000 genes. About 90% of the genome will be completed aural 3 years. 

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