Gaois

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2 results

  1. SCIENCE|natural and applied sciences|life sciences|biology|microorganism
    víreas RNA aonsnáithe cialldhiúltaí Reference "Faofa ag an gCoiste Téarmaíochta, www.tearma.ie ;Faomhadh an téarma seo mar chuid de Thionscadal Lex"
    ga
    negative-sense single-stranded RNA virus | negative-stranded RNA virus | (-)ssRNA virus | antisense-strand RNA virus | negative-strand RNA virus
    en
    Definition virus that uses negative sense, single-stranded RNA as its genetic material Reference "Wikipedia > Negative-sense single-stranded RNA virus (28.5.2020)"
    Comment "The genome of an RNA virus can be said to be either positive-sense, also known as a ""plus-strand"", or negative-sense, also known as a ""minus-strand"". In most cases, the terms ""sense"" and ""strand"" are used interchangeably, making terms such as ""positive-strand"" equivalent to ""positive-sense"", and ""plus-strand"" equivalent to ""plus-sense"". Whether a viral genome is positive-sense or negative-sense can be used as a basis for classifying viruses.Negative-sense (3′-to-5′) viral RNA is complementary to the viral mRNA, thus a positive-sense RNA must be produced by an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase from it prior to translation. Like DNA, negative-sense RNA has a nucleotide sequence complementary to the mRNA that it encodes; also like DNA, this RNA cannot be translated into protein directly. Instead, it must first be transcribed into a positive-sense RNA that acts as an mRNA. Some viruses (e.g. influenza viruses) have negative-sense genomes and so must carry an RNA polymerase inside the virion."
  2. SCIENCE|natural and applied sciences|life sciences|biology
    snáithe neamhchódúcháin Reference Faomhadh an téarma seo mar chuid de Thionscadal Lex
    ga
    anti-sense strand | non-coding strand | antisense strand
    en
    Definition one of the two strands of DNA or RNA with the opposite 'sense' of the mRNA's, that is the strand that is used as a template for producing messenger RNA (mRNA) that directs the synthesis of a protein Reference "COM-Terminology Coordination, based on: - Dr. Sangita Pawa. 'Common Terms in Molecular Biology' (17.11.2020). College of Medicine, University of Arizona- National Human Genome Research Institute. 'Antisense' (17.11.2020)"
    Comment When the RNA is transcribed, the ANTI-SENSE strand is used as the template for RNA polymerization. After all, the RNA must base-pair with its template strand, so the process of transcription produces the complement of the anti-sense strand. This introduces some confusion about terminology.