When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Saturation mutagenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saturation_mutagenesis

    There are many variants of the site saturation technique, from paired site saturation (saturating two positions in every mutant in the library) to scanning site saturation (performing a site saturation at every site in the protein, resulting in a library of size [20^(number of residues in the protein)] that contains every possible point mutant ...

  3. Mutagenesis (molecular biology technique) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutagenesis_(molecular...

    Types of mutations that can be introduced by random, site-directed, combinatorial, or insertional mutagenesis. In molecular biology, mutagenesis is an important laboratory technique whereby DNA mutations are deliberately engineered to produce libraries of mutant genes, proteins, strains of bacteria, or other genetically modified organisms.

  4. Site-directed mutagenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Site-directed_mutagenesis

    Early attempts at mutagenesis using radiation or chemical mutagens were non-site-specific, generating random mutations. [2] Analogs of nucleotides and other chemicals were later used to generate localized point mutations, [3] examples of such chemicals are aminopurine, [4] nitrosoguanidine, [5] and bisulfite. [6]

  5. Mutation testing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutation_testing

    Mutant A is tested first, and the result is that the code is not working correctly. Mutant B is then tested, and the result is the same as with mutant A. In this case, Mutant B is considered to be subsumed by Mutant A, since the result of testing Mutant B is the same as the result of testing Mutant A. Therefore, Mutant B does not need to be ...

  6. Library (biology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Library_(biology)

    A genomic library is a set of clones that together represents the entire genome of a given organism. The number of clones that constitute a genomic library depends on (1) the size of the genome in question and (2) the insert size tolerated by the particular cloning vector system. For most practical purposes, the tissue source of the genomic DNA ...

  7. lwIP - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LwIP

    lwIP (lightweight IP) is a widely used open-source TCP/IP stack designed for embedded systems. lwIP was originally developed by Adam Dunkels at the Swedish Institute of Computer Science and is now developed and maintained by a worldwide network of developers.

  8. Christian Pulisic, now in his No. 10 era, is playing the best ...

    www.aol.com/sports/christian-pulisic-now-no-10...

    In just over three months, Pulisic has already contributed to 16 goals for club and country; he scored his 10th of the campaign Tuesday in AC Milan's 3-2 Champions League win over Slovan Bratislava.

  9. Genetic code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Genetic_code

    The logo shows the 64 codons from left to right, predicted alternatives in red (relative to the standard genetic code). Red line: stop codons. The height of each amino acid in the stack shows how often it is aligned to the codon in homologous protein domains. The stack height indicates the support for the prediction.