exon

listen to the pronunciation of exon
الإنجليزية - التركية
(Tıp) ekson
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
A region of a transcribed gene present in the final functional RNA molecule
An officer of the Queen's Body Guard of the Yeomen of the Guard
(Biyokimya) A segment of a DNA or RNA molecule containing information coding for a protein or peptide sequence. Compare with intron
sequence of a gene's DNA that transcribes into protein structures; "exons are interspersed with introns
segments of a gene (or of the primary transcript of the gene) that is included in the mature, functional messenger RNA, transfer RNA, and ribosomal RNA after RNA processing
Segment on a gene, which contains a part of the structural plan for a protein, approximately 1% of the DNA
(in a gene) - a section of DNA that codes for a protein
Gene sequence that codes for proteins
Exon of the Guards Any one of the three certain officers of the day in command of the yeomen of the royal guard; the acting officer who resides at the court; an exempt Capitaines exempts des gardes du corps (French, exoine, ex soin, exempt from duty or care )
An exon is the region of a transcribed gene present in the final functional RNA molecule
sequence of a gene's DNA that transcribes into protein structures; "exons are interspersed with introns"
Part of a gene whose sequence is present in a mature mRNA after splicing See also Intron
block of DNA or RNA nucleotide sequence which codes for RNA or polypeptide (protein) and which is separated from the next exon by a non-coding region (intron)
A stretch of DNA that codes for part of a protein
A native or inhabitant of Exeter, in England
Protein coding sequences of the primary RNA transcript (or the DNA that encodes them) It exits the nucleus as part of a messenger RNA molecule In the primary transcript neighboring exons are separated by introns Back to Homepage F f
An expressed portion of a gene which will be transcribed and translated into protein
Part of a gene that can encode amino acids in a protein Usually adjacent to a non-coding DNA segment called an intron (Alberts)
A nucleotide sequence (of DNA or RNA) in a gene that codes for part or all of the gene product or for some control function In eukaryotes, exons are separated by non coding sequences called introns
The protein-coding DNA sequence of a gene See also: intron
Coding region of DNA See CDS
An officer of the Yeomen of the Guard; an Exempt
The protein coding region in the DNA sequence of a gene
exons
The protein-coding sequences of genes Exons only comprise about 10% of the human genome See introns
exons
Segments of a eukaryotic gene that encodes mRNA In DNA, exons are adjacent to non-coding DNA segments, called introns
exons
plural of exon
exons
The protein- coding DNA sequences of a gene Compare introns
exons
The protein-coding DNA sequences of a gene
exons
part of DNA that will code for an amino acid
exons
Portion of the DNA sequence that codes for the protein parts of the gene
exons
Segments of a gene on genomic DNA that contain the instructions for making a protein
exons
A section of DNA which carries the coding sequence for a protein or part of it Exons are separated by intervening, non- coding sequences (introns) In eukaryotes most genes consist of a number of exons [IUPAC Bioinorganic]
exons
the portion of a eukaryotic gene that is expressed; exons are divided from eachother by introns
exon

    الواصلة

    ex·on

    التركية النطق

    eksôn

    النطق

    /ˌekˈsôn/ /ˌɛkˈsɔːn/

    علم أصول الكلمات

    [ 'ek-"sän ] (noun.) circa 1978. Apparently an attempt to express the pronunciation of French exempt.
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