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26 Definitions

RNA

For RNA we have terms and definitions in 26 topics. The topics are Anti-Aging, Beauty, Biology, Cancer, Dairy Production, Dna, Drug Research, Environmental Acronyms, Enzymatic Therapy, Evolution, Food, Food and Health, Fossils, Gene Testing, Genetics, Genetics and Food, Gerontology, HIV and AIDs, Health and Beauty, Hepatitis C, Horse Health, Huntingtons Disease, Medical, Microbiology, Nutrition and Phamaceutical Industry Acronyms.



RNA (Anti-Aging)


ribonucleic acid, which carries instructions from DNA in the nucleus to cell polyribosomes, where proteins are, made according to the RNA instructions.


RNA (Beauty)

Ribonucleic acid; the nucleic acid in which the sugar is ribose, constituting the genetic material in the RNA viruses and playing a role in the flow of genetic information. RNA serves as a template for protein synthesis.


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RNA (Biology)

Ribonucleic acid; a nucleic acid produced during transcription that is complementary to a DNA strand; similar to DNA in structure but contains the carbohydrate ribose and the pyrimidine uracil rather than thymine.


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RNA (Cancer)

Ribonucleic acid. One of the two types of nucleic acids found in all cells. The other is deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). RNA transmits genetic information from DNA to proteins produced by the cell.


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RNA (Dairy Production)

Ribonucleic acid serves as the messenger that "decodes" the genetic instructions in DNA and causes specific functional proteins to be made.


RNA (Dna)

A single-stranded polymer of four different monomers - adenosine, cytosine, guanosine and uridine


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RNA (Drug Research)

Ribonucleic Acid. A molecule similar in structure to DNA that is used in the process of building proteins from the instructions contained in DNA. Also, some viruses use RNA instead of DNA as their genetic material.


RNA (Environmental Acronyms)

Ribonucleic Acid


RNA (Enzymatic Therapy)

Ribonucleic acid, molecules that put into action the messages from DNA for cells to fulfill their specific roles.


RNA (Evolution)

Ribonucleic acid. Messenger RNA, ribosomal RNA, and transfer RNA are its three main forms. These act as the intermediaries by which the hereditary code of DNA is converted into proteins. In some viruses, RNA is itself the hereditary molecule.


RNA (Food)

So known as ribonucleic acid. RNA is a molecule similar to DNA that functions primarily to decode the instructions carried by genes for protein synthesis.


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RNA (Food and Health)

Also known as ribonucleic acid. RNA is a molecule similar to DNA that functions primarily to decode the instructions carried by genes for protein synthesis.


RNA (Fossils)

A linear, usually single-stranded polymer of ribonucleotides, each containing the sugar ribose in association with a phosphate group and one of four nitrogenous bases: adenine, guanine, cytosine, or uracil. RNA is found in all living cells; in prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells, it encodes the information needed to synthesize proteins (i.e., it copies “instructions” that it receives from DNA); in certain viruses, it serves as the genome. (An abbreviation for ribonucleic acid.)
sandstone A clastic sedimentary rock in which the particles are dominantly of sand size, from 0.062 mm to 2 mm in diameter.


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RNA (Gene Testing)

A chemical similar to DNA. The several classes of RNA molecules play important roles in protein synthesis and other cell activities.


RNA (Genetics)

See Ribonucleic acid.


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RNA (Genetics and Food)

stands for ribonucleic acid. A nucleic acid present in all living cells. It acts as a messenger carrying instructions from DNA for controlling the synthesis of the proteins that are the essential fabric of all living organisms.


RNA (Gerontology)

Ribonucleic acid. RNA is a sequential chain of the nucleotides Adenosine, Guanosine, Thymidine, and Uridine. In RNA, the sugar molecules are ribose. RNA is typically single stranded. The sequence of most RNA molecules is copied from specific DNA sequences by enzymes in a process called transcription.


RNA (HIV and AIDs)

See RIBONUCLEIC ACID.


RNA (Health and Beauty)

Ribonucleic acid; the nucleic acid in which the sugar is ribose, constituting the genetic material in the RNA viruses and playing a role in the flow of genetic information. RNA serves as a template for protein synthesis.


RNA (Hepatitis C)

The abbreviation for ribonucleic acid, a form of genetic material. RNA is much less stable than DNA, and mutates frequently during its reproduction. For this reason, all life forms (with the exception some viruses) use it only as a temporary messenger molecule to carry information that is permanently stored in DNA.


RNA (Horse Health)

See ribonucleic acid.


RNA (Huntingtons Disease)

Abbreviation for ribonucleic acid; composed of many nucleotide subunits arranged in a long chain and associated with the control of cellular chemical activities; carries the information necessary to make proteins.


RNA (Medical)

Ribonucleic acid, which helps to decode and process the information contained in DNA


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RNA (Microbiology)

See ribonucleic acid.


RNA (Nutrition)

(Ribonucleic acid) A complex protein which carried coded genetic messages from the DNA in the cell nucleus to our cells where the messages are translated to synthesize proteins.


RNA (Phamaceutical Industry Acronyms)

Ribonucleic Acid




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