Where can you get the sequence of one exon of a gene?
Get the sequence of one exon of a gene, without counting the nucleotides.
The answer is the exon/intron search at www.mybioinfo.info
For example:
http://www.mybioinfo..._id=GeneID:7127
The exon and intron sequences are seperated clearly.
Where can you get the sequence of one exon of a gene?
Started by Gu_Margaret, Jan 14 2010 05:54 AM
3 replies to this topic
#1
Posted 14 January 2010 - 05:54 AM
#2
Posted 22 January 2010 - 05:15 PM
Gu_Margaret, on Jan 14 2010, 05:54 AM, said:
Where can you get the sequence of one exon of a gene?
Get the sequence of one exon of a gene, without counting the nucleotides.
The answer is the exon/intron search at www.mybioinfo.info
For example:
http://www.mybioinfo..._id=GeneID:7127
The exon and intron sequences are seperated clearly.
Get the sequence of one exon of a gene, without counting the nucleotides.
The answer is the exon/intron search at www.mybioinfo.info
For example:
http://www.mybioinfo..._id=GeneID:7127
The exon and intron sequences are seperated clearly.
#3
Posted 23 January 2010 - 02:48 AM
Radish, on Jan 23 2010, 01:15 AM, said:
Gu_Margaret, on Jan 14 2010, 05:54 AM, said:
Where can you get the sequence of one exon of a gene?
Get the sequence of one exon of a gene, without counting the nucleotides.
The answer is the exon/intron search at www.mybioinfo.info
For example:
http://www.mybioinfo..._id=GeneID:7127
The exon and intron sequences are seperated clearly.
Get the sequence of one exon of a gene, without counting the nucleotides.
The answer is the exon/intron search at www.mybioinfo.info
For example:
http://www.mybioinfo..._id=GeneID:7127
The exon and intron sequences are seperated clearly.
Ensembl and NCBI are better.













