the process of making a double-stranded DNA copy of an RNA molecule, used by retroviruses to convert viral RNA into DNA that can integrate into the chromosome of the infected cell; carried out by the enzyme reverse transcriptase
The synthesis of a single-stranded DNA molecule on an RNA template.
Synthesis of DNA from RNA. Occurs naturally in retroviruses. In other organisms RNA is synthesised from DNA.
reverse transcription means to convert RNA to DNA.
DNA synthesis from RNA templates, catalysed by the enzyme reverse transcriptase; the opposite of transcription. Occurs naturally in retroviruses. Reverse transcription is used to synthesise DNA for probes.
The reverse of transcription - making a copy of complementary DNA (cDNA) from an RNA sequence - catalyzed by the enzyme, reverse transcriptase.
The process of copying RNA into DNA, carried out by retroviral reverse transcriptase.
Variation of transcription in which a double strand of DNA is constructed from an RNA template.
The process of copying and RNA sequence back into the complementary DNA sequence.
synthesis of DNA on a template of RNA by reverse transcriptase.
the copying of an RNA molecule back into its DNA complement. The enzymes that perform this function are called reverse transcriptases. Reverse transcription is is used naturally by retroviruses to insert themselves into an organism's genome. Artifically-induced reverse transcription is a useful technique for translating unstable mRNA molecules into stable cDNA.
Process of transcribing a single-stranded DNA from a single-stranded RNA (the reverse of transcription); used by retroviruses as well as in biotechnology.
the synthesis of new strands of DNA using an RNA template and an enzyme called "reverse transcriptase."