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EVOLUTIONARY RELATIONSHIPS THROUGH NUCLEIC ACID SIMILARITIES.
1968
Ian Gibson
School of Biological Sciences, University of East Anglia, Norwich, England.
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Ian Gibson
Nucleic acid sequence similarities: 'poly(A) tendency'.
December 1980, FEBS letters,
Ian Gibson
The statistical distribution of nucleic acid similarities.
January 1985, Nucleic acids research,
Ian Gibson
Structural similarities and evolutionary relationships in chloride-dependent alpha-amylases.
July 2000, Gene,
Ian Gibson
Sequence similarities and evolutionary relationships of influenza virus A hemagglutinins.
January 2002, Virus genes,
Ian Gibson
On the statistical significance of nucleic acid similarities.
January 1984, Nucleic acids research,
Ian Gibson
Similarities between thymus nucleic acid and a polyelectrolyte.
February 1952, Biochimica et biophysica acta,
Ian Gibson
GENETIC SIMILARITIES AND EVOLUTIONARY RELATIONSHIPS AMONG THE SEMISPECIES OF DROSOPHILA PAULISTORUM.
December 1972, Evolution; international journal of organic evolution,
Ian Gibson
Nucleic acid relationships among Acholeplasma species.
March 1983, Journal of bacteriology,
Ian Gibson
Bacteriophage T5 structure reveals similarities with HK97 and T4 suggesting evolutionary relationships.
September 2006, Journal of molecular biology,
Ian Gibson
Sequence similarities and evolutionary relationships of microbial, plant and animal alpha-amylases.
September 1994, European journal of biochemistry,
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