Recombinant DNA: Difference between revisions

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In [[biology]], '''recombinant DNA''' is "biologically active [[DNA]] which has been formed by the in vitro joining of segments of DNA from different sources. It includes the [[recombination]] joint or edge of a heteroduplex region where two recombining DNA molecules are connected."<ref>{{MeSH}}</ref>
In [[biology]], '''recombinant DNA''' is "biologically active [[DNA]] which has been formed by the in vitro joining of segments of DNA from different sources. It includes the [[recombination]] joint or edge of a heteroduplex region where two recombining DNA molecules are connected."<ref>{{MeSH}}</ref>



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In biology, recombinant DNA is "biologically active DNA which has been formed by the in vitro joining of segments of DNA from different sources. It includes the recombination joint or edge of a heteroduplex region where two recombining DNA molecules are connected."[1]

Recombinant proteins are "proteins prepared by recombinant DNA technology."[2]

References