cytogeneticsbiology

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  • major reference ( in genetics: Cytogenetics )

    Cytogenetics, the microscopic study of chromosomes, blends the skills of cytologists, who study the structure and activities of cells, with those of geneticists, who study genes. Cytologists discovered chromosomes and the way in which they duplicate and separate during cell division at about the same time that geneticists began to understand the behaviour of genes at the cellular level. The...

    in genetics: Cytogenetic techniques )

    Cytogenetics focuses on the microscopic examination of genetic components of the cell, including chromosomes, genes, and gene products. Older cytogenetic techniques involve placing cells in paraffin wax, slicing thin sections, and preparing them for microscopic study. The newer and faster squash technique involves squashing entire cells and studying their contents. Dyes that selectively stain...

  • development from cytology ( in cytology )

    ...that organismic processes are reflections of cellular processes; he thus established cytology as a separate branch of biology. Research into the activities of chromosomes led to the founding of cytogenetics, in 1902–04, when the American geneticist Walter Sutton and the German zoologist Theodor Boveri demonstrated the connection between cell division and heredity. Modern cytologists...

  • diagnosis of genetic disorders ( in diagnosis: Genetic testing )

    Cytogenetics is the microscopic study of chromosomes and the transmission of genetic material from parent to offspring. Humans have 22 pairs of autosomal chromosomes plus a pair of sex chromosomes, with one chromosome of each of the 23 pairs being inherited from each parent. There are 50,000 to 100,000 genes arranged along the chromosomes in linear order, each having a precise location, or...

  • study of human chromosomes ( in genetics, human: The human chromosomes )

    A new era in cytogenetics, the field of investigation concerned with studies of the chromosomes, began in 1956 with the discovery by Jo Hin Tjio and Albert Levan that human somatic cells contain 23 pairs of chromosomes. Since that time the field has advanced with amazing rapidity and has demonstrated that human chromosome aberrations rank as major causes of fetal death and of tragic human...

  • work by Flemming ( in Flemming, Walther )

    German anatomist, a founder of the science of cytogenetics (the study of the cell’s hereditary material, the chromosomes). He was the first to observe and describe systematically the behaviour of chromosomes in the cell nucleus during normal cell division (mitosis).

Citations

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"cytogenetics." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2008. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 20 Nov. 2008 <http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/148916/cytogenetics>.

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cytogenetics. (2008). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved November 20, 2008, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online: http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/148916/cytogenetics

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