释义 |
complementation
complementation (ˌkɒmplɪmɛnˈteɪʃən) n1. (Genetics) the act or process of forming a complement2. (Genetics) genetics the combination of two homologous chromosomes, each with a different recessive mutant gene, in a single cell to produce a normal phenotype. The deficiency of one homologue is supplied by the normal allele of the othercom•ple•men•ta•tion (ˌkɒm plə mənˈteɪ ʃən) n. 1. complement (def. 5). 2. the use of grammatical complements. [1935–40] ThesaurusNoun | 1. | complementation - the grammatical relation of a word or phrase to a predicategrammatical relation - a linguistic relation established by grammar | | 2. | complementation - (linguistics) a distribution of related speech sounds or forms in such a way that they only appear in different contextscomplementary distributiondispersion, distribution - the spatial or geographic property of being scattered about over a range, area, or volume; "worldwide in distribution"; "the distribution of nerve fibers"; "in complementary distribution"linguistics - the scientific study of language | TranslationsComplementation
Complementation (genetics) The complementary action of different genetic factors. The term usually implies two homologous chromosomes or chromosome sets, each defective because of mutation and unable by itself to promote the normal development or metabolism of the organism, but able to do so jointly when brought together in the same cell. See Chromosome, Mutation S. Benzer proposed the term cistron for the unit within which mutants do not complement each other. The word gene is often used in the same sense. The usual biochemical function of a cistron, or gene, is to determine the structure of a specific polypeptide component of a protein. Full complementation between different genes is the rule except when, as sometimes in bacteria, the genes form part of a functionally coordinated complex (operon). Allelic mutants (mutants within one gene) show limited complementation in some cases, for example, when certain pairs of mutant polypeptides correct each other's defects through coaggregation in a complex protein. See Genetics, Operon Complementation in genetics, the complementary action of two alleles of a single gene or two different genes of the same chromosomal set. Interallelic complementation is associated with the synthesis in heterozygotes of two different but functionally similar protein molecules instead of the one protein molecule of homozygotes. Moreover, heterozygotes often have hybrid protein molecules made of polypeptide chains that are synthesized under the control of two different alleles. In heterozygotes with defective mutant alleles, complementation may be expressed in a restoration of the ability to synthesize a normally functioning protein—an ability that would be partly or wholly lost to each mutant separately. Interallelic complementation seems to be the main cause of monogenic heterosis—the superiority of heterozygotes over homozygotes in viability and rate of growth. Detailed complementation charts have been constructed for the genes of certain viruses, bacteria, and fungi. Intergenic complementation is a manifestation of the interaction of nonallelic genes (epistasis), whereby a defect expressed in the impairment of a given metabolic process is compensated by other genes. The term “complementarity” is sometimes used in biological literature in a sense similar or identical to complementation. REFERENCEFincham, J. Geneticheskaia komplementatsiia. Moscow, 1968. (Translated from English.)V. S. KIRPICHNIKOV complementation[‚käm·plə·mən′tā·shən] (mathematics) The act of replacing a set by its complement. complementation
com·ple·men·ta·tion (kom'plĕ-men-tā'shŭn), 1. Functional interaction between two defective viruses permitting replication under conditions inhibitory to the single virus. 2. Interaction between two genetic units, one or both of which are defective, permitting the organism containing these units to function normally, whereas it could not do so if either unit were absent. complementation Psychology The process of functioning differently than, and in reciprocation to, someone else, by responding to that person's activities, behavior, and reactions, especially vis-á-vis differentiation of gender-identity/role. Cf Identification. com·ple·men·ta·tion (kom'plĕ-men-tā'shŭn) 1. Interaction between two defective viruses permitting replication under conditions inhibitory to the single virus. 2. Interaction between two genetic units, one or both of which aredefective, permitting the organism containing these units to function normally, whereas it could not do so if either unit were absent. complementation complementation is not available in the list of acronyms. Check:- general English dictionary
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complementation
Synonyms for complementationnoun the grammatical relation of a word or phrase to a predicateRelated Wordsnoun (linguistics) a distribution of related speech sounds or forms in such a way that they only appear in different contextsSynonyms- complementary distribution
Related Words- dispersion
- distribution
- linguistics
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