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  2. cDNA library - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CDNA_library

    A cDNA library is a combination of cloned cDNA (complementary DNA) fragments inserted into a collection of host cells, which constitute some portion of the transcriptome of the organism and are stored as a "library". cDNA is produced from fully transcribed mRNA found in the nucleus and therefore contains only the expressed genes of an organism.

  3. Functional cloning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Functional_cloning

    Expression cDNA libraries may be screened with antibodies specific for the protein of interest or may rely on selection via the protein function. [1] Historically, the amino acid sequence of a protein was used to prepare degenerate oligonucleotides which were then probed against the library to identify the gene encoding the protein of interest.

  4. Expressed sequence tag - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expressed_sequence_tag

    An EST results from one-shot sequencing of a cloned cDNA. The cDNAs used for EST generation are typically individual clones from a cDNA library. The resulting sequence is a relatively low-quality fragment whose length is limited by current technology to approximately 500 to 800 nucleotides. Because these clones consist of DNA that is ...

  5. Site-directed mutagenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Site-directed_mutagenesis

    Depiction of one common way to clone a site-directed mutagenesis library (i.e., using degenerate oligos). The gene of interest is PCRed with oligos that contain a region that is perfectly complementary to the template (blue), and one that differs from the template by one or more nucleotides (red).

  6. Serial analysis of gene expression - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serial_analysis_of_gene...

    In 1979 teams at Harvard and Caltech extended the basic idea of making DNA copies of mRNAs in vitro to amplifying a library of such in bacterial plasmids. [5] In 1982–1983, the idea of selecting random or semi-random clones from such a cDNA library for sequencing was explored by Greg Sutcliffe and coworkers.

  7. IMAGE cDNA clones - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IMAGE_cDNA_clones

    IMAGE cDNA clones are a collection of DNA vectors containing cDNAs from various organisms including human, mouse, rat, non-human primates, zebrafish, pufferfish, Xenopus (frogs), and cow. [ 1 ] Together they represent a more or less complete set of expressed genes from these organisms.

  8. 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 ...

  9. RNA-Seq - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RNA-Seq

    The cDNA library derived from RNA biotypes is then sequenced into a computer-readable format. There are many high-throughput sequencing technologies for cDNA sequencing including platforms developed by Illumina , Thermo Fisher , BGI/MGI , PacBio , and Oxford Nanopore Technologies . [ 18 ]