English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

2006-07-07 02:50:41 · 6 answers · asked by Aroura 3 in Science & Mathematics Biology

6 answers

'Karyote' as in Eukaryote and Prokaryote comes from the Greek 'κάρυον' which means 'nut', which refers to the nucleus. You can call a nucleus a karyon, literally the 'nut' or 'kernel' of the cell.

2006-07-07 02:54:25 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 8 0

Karyote : A Genomic, Proteomic, Metabolic Cell Simulator

Karyote is a quantitative model of the dynamics of a cell and its response to chemical disturbances, gene deletion/mutation and the presence of other cells. Karyote is based on the numerical solution of a set of reaction-transport equations underlying the kinetics of genomic, proteomic and metabolic processes (see figure). It is integrated with a variety of experimental data types through our novel information theory approach; the result is an automated procedure for tailoring Karyote to a given cell type and that all predictions are accompanied by an assessment of uncertainty. Karyote also serves as a data archive with self-consistent automated interpretation of the expanding genomic, proteomic, metabolic and other information. Through our information theory framework, incompleteness in Karyote can be compensated for with time series data; complex data sets can be automatically synthesized and integrated. In this way Karyote is an end-to-end cell modeling system.

Karyote has great potential for accelerating drug discovery, optimizing treatment regimes, testing concepts in cloning and designing microbes for biotechnical and environmental remediation activities. The information you input to Karyote can be kept proprietary or may be released to other users. You may export models as SBML files. You may delete your information from our files at any time. All data is regularly backed up. If it is of interest the Karyote System can be installed at your site by special arrangement.

2006-07-07 02:55:00 · answer #2 · answered by Banderes 4 · 0 3

David Johnson and David Lewis posted the same question. You should read the answers side by side.

2016-08-23 01:21:26 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Not sure if that's correct

2016-08-08 04:36:20 · answer #4 · answered by ? 3 · 0 1

Do you mean KAREOKE??

Kareoke is loosely translated Japanese for "imitation singing"!

2006-07-07 02:52:40 · answer #5 · answered by crazyotto65 5 · 0 4

It depends..

2016-09-19 08:48:06 · answer #6 · answered by ? 2 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers