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| 001 | 991010593259707486 | ||
| 005 | 20250814093930.0 | ||
| 008 | 950705s1994 en a r 00110 eng d | ||
| 020 | _a0198542879 | ||
| 040 |
_aUniCIEO _cUniCIEO _dUniCIEO |
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| 041 | 0 | _aeng | |
| 082 | 0 | 4 |
_a575.1 L672g _bL672g _219 ed. _cL672g |
| 100 | 1 |
_aLewin, Benjamin M. _4autor. _94963 |
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| 245 | 1 | 0 |
_aGenes V / _cBenjamin Lewin. |
| 260 |
_aOxford : _bOxford University Press, _cc1994. |
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| 300 |
_axxiv, 1272 páginas. : _bil., diagrs. [col.] ; _c28 cm. |
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| 500 |
_aIncluye tabla de contenido. _aIncluye glosario e índice de materias. |
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| 504 | _aIncluye referencias bibliográficas al final de cada capítulo. | ||
| 505 | _aIntroduction. Cells as macromolecular assemblies. -- Chapter 1. Cells obey the laws of physics and chemistry. -- Chapter 2. Cells are organized into compartments. -- Part 1. DNA as a store of information. -- Chapter 3. Genes are mutable units. -- Chapter 4. DNA is the genetic material. -- Chapter 5. The topology of nucleic acids. -- Chapter 6. Isolating the gene. -- Part 2. Translation: expressing genes as proteins. -- Chapter 7. The assembly line for protein synthesis. -- Chapter 8. Transfer RNA is the traslational adaptor. -- Chapter 9. Ribosomes provide a traslation factory. -- Chapter 10. Messenger RNA is the template. -- Part 3. Constructing the cell. -- Chapter 11. The apparatus for protein localization. -- Chapter 12. Receptors and signal trasduction: channels and ion uptake. -- Chapter 13. Cell cycle and growth regulation. -- Part 4. Control of prokaryotic gene expression. -- Chapter 14. Control at initiation: RNA polymerase- promoter interactions. -- Chapter 15. A panoply of operons: the lactose paradigm and others. -- Chapter 16. Control by RNA structure: termination and antitermination. -- Chapter 17. Phage strategies: lytic cascades and lysogenic repression. -- Part 5. Perpetuation of DNA. -- Chapter 18. The replicon: unit of replication. -- Chapter 19. Primosome and replisomes: the apparatus for DNA replication. -- Chapter 20. Systems that safeguard DNA. -- Part 6. Organization of the eukaryotic genome. -- Chapter 21. The extraordinary power of DNA techonology. -- Chapter 22. Genome size and genetic content. -- Chapter 23. The eukaryotic gene: conserved exons and unique introns. -- Chapter 24. Gene numbers: repetition and redundancy. -- Chapter 25. Genomes sequestered in organelles. -- Chapter 26. Organization of simple sequence DNA. -- Chapter 27. The genome is packaged into chromosomes. -- Chapter 28. Chromosomes consist of nucleosomes. -- Part 7. Eukaryotic transcription and RNA processing. -- Chapter 29. Building the transcription complex: promoters, factors, and RNA polymeraess. -- Chapter 30. Regulation of transcription: factors that activate the basal apparatus. -- Chapter 31. The apparatus for nuclear splicing. -- Chapter 32. Changing the onformational content of RNA. -- Part 8. The dynamic genome: DNA in flux. -- Chapter 33. Recombination of DNA. -- Chapter 34. Transpossons that mobilize via DNA. -- Chapter 35. Retroviruses and retroposons. -- Chapter 36. Rearrangement and amplification in the genome. -- Part 9. Genes in development. -- Chapter 37. Generation of immune diversity by gene reorganization. -- Chapter 38. Gene regulation in development: gradients and cascades. -- Chapter 3*9. Oncogenes: gene expression and cancer. | ||
| 650 | 7 |
_aGenéťica. _2BLAAUTO _94964 |
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| 650 | 7 |
_aADN. _2BLAAUTO _94965 |
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| 650 | 7 |
_aARN. _2BLAAUTO _94966 |
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| 650 | 7 |
_aIngeniería genéťica. _2BLAAUTO _94967 |
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_0Lewin, Benjamin _4autor. |
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_2ddc _cLIBRO-GRAL |
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