ATAR Notes: Forum
VCE Stuff => VCE Science => VCE Mathematics/Science/Technology => VCE Subjects + Help => VCE Biology => Topic started by: claire.anglim on November 01, 2009, 12:55:41 pm
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Hi, I was just wondering what Hybridisation was, and to what degree we need to know it for tomorrow, I've seen it in a number of exams as well as 2007 VCAA, and they all have conflicting answers.
For myself, I interpreted it as a technique that measures the degree of similiarity in different gene pools. so there fore could I just say that it is a tool that can be used to identify DNA.
And in the 2007 answer, I could use the RNA probe to identify specific sequences of DNA that are then joined together to form Hybrids?
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Depends which hybridisation you're talking about. "Hybridisation" in its most general biological sense is the chemical bonding of two DNA strands, where each single strand comes from a different source (i.e. different organism or species). The technique of DNA-DNA hybridisation is used to determine evolutionary relationships between species by comparing the degree of hybridisation of DNA between two species.