Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Gene_electrotransfer> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 51 of
51
with 100 triples per page.
- Gene_electrotransfer abstract "Gene electrotransfer is a versatile biotechnology technique that enables the transfer of genetic material into prokaryotic or eukaryotic cells. It is based on a physical method named electroporation, where a transient increase in the permeability of cell membrane is achieved when submitted to short and intense electric pulses, thus enabling the transport of large molecules (naked plasmid DNA, antisense oligonucleotides, siRNA) into cells that otherwise cannot permeate through the cell membrane. Gene electrotransfer was first described in the 1980s and since then due to its ease of application and efficiency become a routine method for introducing foreign genes into bacterial, yeast, plant, and animal cells in vitro and into different tissues, including muscle, tumors, liver, and skin in vivo.".
- Gene_electrotransfer thumbnail Electrogenetransfer.JPG?width=300.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageID "26245162".
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageLength "8320".
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageOutDegree "23".
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageRevisionID "592656941".
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink Bacteria.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink Biotechnology.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink Category:Biotechnology.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink Cell_(biology).
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink Cell_membrane.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink DNA.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink Electroporation.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink Eukaryote.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink Eukaryotic.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink Genome.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink In_vitro.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink In_vivo.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink Liver.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink Molecule.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink Muscle.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink Neoplasm.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink Oligonucleotide.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink Oligonucleotides.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink Plant.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink Prokaryote.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink Prokaryotic.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink SiRNA.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink Skin.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink Small_interfering_RNA.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink Tissue_(biology).
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink Tumor.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink Yeast.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLink File:Electrogenetransfer.JPG.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLinkText "Gene electrotransfer".
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageWikiLinkText "gene electrotransfer".
- Gene_electrotransfer hasPhotoCollection Gene_electrotransfer.
- Gene_electrotransfer wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Gene_electrotransfer subject Category:Biotechnology.
- Gene_electrotransfer hypernym Technique.
- Gene_electrotransfer type Software.
- Gene_electrotransfer comment "Gene electrotransfer is a versatile biotechnology technique that enables the transfer of genetic material into prokaryotic or eukaryotic cells. It is based on a physical method named electroporation, where a transient increase in the permeability of cell membrane is achieved when submitted to short and intense electric pulses, thus enabling the transport of large molecules (naked plasmid DNA, antisense oligonucleotides, siRNA) into cells that otherwise cannot permeate through the cell membrane.".
- Gene_electrotransfer label "Gene electrotransfer".
- Gene_electrotransfer sameAs m.0b73jwg.
- Gene_electrotransfer sameAs Genska_elektrotransfekcija.
- Gene_electrotransfer sameAs Q5531552.
- Gene_electrotransfer sameAs Q5531552.
- Gene_electrotransfer sameAs 基因電轉移.
- Gene_electrotransfer wasDerivedFrom Gene_electrotransfer?oldid=592656941.
- Gene_electrotransfer depiction Electrogenetransfer.JPG.
- Gene_electrotransfer isPrimaryTopicOf Gene_electrotransfer.