0 to join two pieces of rope, film, etc. together at their ends in order to form one long piece: --
Scientists have discovered how to splice pieces of DNA.
1 a join between two pieces of something so that they form one long piece --
2 to join the ends of something so that they become one piece: --
The second word invades, splices to itself engrafted signs, charges the boundaries of the single term.
The use of such consensus sequences is likely to improve alignment, increase splicing evidence, and has been shown to improve the detection of protein homology.
The finding of a splicing protein that was highly expressed in the brain was initially met with considerable excitement.
Besides, it was a more suitable medium for splicing and editing.
Therefore, only exons that were spliced out individually were compared to the mean values.
The situation is further complicated by extensive splicing variation and elusive gene expression.
A completely new possibility of organising sounds appears with tape editing, which permits tape to be spliced and arranged with an extraordinary new precision.
The splices, prompter, and audience participation are clearly audible.