New pages
- 22:56, 29 October 2017 Genetic Drift (hist) [1,179 bytes] Floyd (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Genetic drift is the loss of genetic variation over time due to random chance in the sampling of alleles from one generation to the next. By chance some genetic variation is n...")
- 19:53, 29 October 2017 Central Dogma (hist) [1,290 bytes] Floyd (talk | contribs) (Created page with "The Central Dogma in Bold Information in molecular biology flows from DNA, which is replicated, to RNA by transcription, and then...")
- 12:41, 29 October 2017 Topics to be Added (hist) [375 bytes] Floyd (talk | contribs) (Created page with "*Human Genetics **Human Genetic Disorders ***Alzheimer's Disease ***Haemochromatosis ***Type 1 Diabetes")
- 14:21, 21 October 2017 Codon Table (hist) [4,963 bytes] Floyd (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{| |+ |- ! scope="row" | | UUU | F | UCU | S | UAU | Y | UGU | C |- ! scope="row" | | UUC | F | UCC | S | UAC | Y | UGC | C |- ! scope="row" | | UUA | L | UCA | S | UAA...")
- 03:06, 21 October 2017 Heritability (hist) [5,073 bytes] Floyd (talk | contribs) (Created page with "The concept of heritability recognizes that traits are a product of both genetic and non-genetic (referred to as environmental) effects. Some phenotypes are predominantly infl...")
- 19:46, 18 October 2017 Unusual heterokaryon complementation patterns (hist) [3,295 bytes] Floyd (talk | contribs) (Created page with "When heterokaryons are produced the cells fuse but the nuclei do not. This might provide an opportunity to study effects that are restricted to the nuclei versus effects that...")
- 02:57, 15 October 2017 Heterozygosity (hist) [9,739 bytes] Floyd (talk | contribs) (Created page with "In population genetics heterozygosity is a measure of genetic diversity in a population. It represents an equilibrium between the input of genetic variation by mutation and th...")
- 11:20, 13 October 2017 Complementation (hist) [16,522 bytes] Floyd (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Complementation tests if two different alleles that result in observable phenotypes are part of the same gene or are alleles of different genes. If you have generated a range...")