Look up Transcription in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Transcription may be one of the following: Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ... Wiktionary is a Wikimedia Foundation project intended to be a free wiki dictionary (hence: Wiktionary) (including thesaurus and lexicon) in every language. ...
Transcriber (linguistics), The one who writes down conversation of spoken words.
Transcription (genetics), the process of copying DNA to RNA by an enzyme called RNA polymerase (RNAP)
Transcription (music), either notating an unnotated piece, common in ethnomusicology, or rewriting a piece, either simply recopying (as for clarity), or as an arrangement for another instrument.
Transcription is the conversion into written, typewritten or printed form, of a spoken language source, such as the proceedings of a court hearing. ... Transcription is the process through which a DNA sequence is enzymatically copied by an RNA polymerase to produce a complementary RNA. Or, in other words, the transfer of genetic information from DNA into RNA. In the case of protein-encoding DNA, transcription is the beginning of the process that ultimately... In music, transcription is the act of notating a piece or a sound which was previously unnotated. ...
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Transcription is the transfer of genetic information from DNA to RNA, using DNA as a template.
The transcript is released from its template strand by the unwinding of RNA-DNA duplex by the rho factor.
For transcription of genes by RNA polymerase III, the promoter is sometimes located in a segment within the transcribed part of the gene, between +40 and +80, but can also be partially upsteam or entirely upstream fro the start site.
Transcription is the process through which a DNA sequence is enzymatically copied by an RNA polymerase to produce a complementary RNA.
Transcription has some proofreading mechanisms, but they are fewer and less effective than the controls for DNA; therefore, transcription has a lower copying fidelity than DNA replication.
For instance, in eukaryotes the genetic material (DNA), and therefore transcription, is primarily localized to the nucleus, where it is separated from the cytoplasm (where translation occurs) by the nuclear membrane.