The scientific principles behind biotechnology are anchored in what is known as the central dogma of biology and genetics. |
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There is a central dogma of ethical theory, namely that it rest on revealing or constructing a moral bedrock that tells us the right way to think about moral problems. |
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The central dogma in its modern form can be understood in terms of the flow of information within individuals and between generations carried by macromolecules. |
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The central dogma of molecular biology is the explanation of the way in which the information of such programs is encoded, decoded, maintained, copied, and transmitted within the cell. |
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It's central dogma in the BMA that what is good for doctors is good for patients. |
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More economic growth and international trade at any cost had become the central dogma of all policies. |
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More recent research data seemed to contradict the neat certainties of the central dogma. |
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Chin is rewriting this central dogma to create organisms that synthesize proteins containing designer amino acids. |
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In an important presentation dated back in 1957, Crick proposed the central dogma of molecular biology, establishing the relationships among DNA, RNA and proteins. |
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As we mentioned previously the central dogma of biology tells us that from the DNA we obtain a molecule of RNA and from this last one we obtain the proteins. |
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Fig. 2 The central dogma of information flow in biology. |
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The Central Dogma is still commonly applied and has had good success in defining when some anesthetic agents might protect. |
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