Ago

Ago or AGO may refer to:

People

  • Ago of Friuli, 7th-century Duke of Friuli
  • Ago Markvardt (born 1969), Estonian skier
  • Ago Neo (1908–1982), Estonian wrestler
  • Ago Silde (born 1963), Estonian politician
  • Agostino Carollo, Italian musician who released records as "Ago"
  • Erbi Ago (born 1990), Albanian model
  • Petrit Ago, Albanian civil servant
  • Roberto Ago (1907–1995), Italian jurist
  • Places

  • Ago Bay, a bay in Japan
  • Ago, Mie, a town in Japan
  • Ago, Papua New Guinea in Morobe Province
  • Ago-Oba, electoral district in Nigeria
  • Angola, ISO 3166-1 alpha-3 country code
  • Other uses

  • Ag-o (악어), a 1996 South Korean film
  • AGO Flugzeugwerke, a German aircraft manufacturer
  • AGO system, a manufacturing process for making stitchless shoes
  • Alpha Gamma Omega, a national, Christ-Centered fraternity
  • American Guild of Organists
  • Argonaute proteins
  • Art Gallery of Ontario
  • Attorney General's Office
  • Auditor General of Ontario
  • Australian Geospatial-Intelligence Organisation
  • Operation A-Go (あ号作戦), Japanese plans for the Battle of the Philippine Sea during World War Two
  • Argonaute

    The Argonaute protein family plays a central role in RNA silencing processes, as essential catalytic components of the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC). RISC complex is responsible for the gene silencing phenomenon known as RNA interference (RNAi). Argonaute proteins bind different classes of small non-coding RNAs, including microRNAs (miRNAs), small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) and Piwi-interacting RNAs (piRNAs). Small RNAs guide Argonaute proteins to their specific targets through sequence complementarity (base pairing), which then leads to mRNA cleavage or translation inhibition.

    Discovery

    The RNA interference (RNAi) was first reported in 1995 by Guo and Kemphues, and similar pathways collectively referred to as RNA silencing were discovered in plants and fungi. The beginning of people’s understanding of the mechanism of RNA silencing began only in 1998 with the experiments of Fire and colleagues demonstrating that double-stranded RNA triggered RNAi. RNA silencing pathways process long RNAs into small RNAs that direct the repression of transcription or translation of nucleic acid targets with sequence corresponding to the small RNAs. These single-stranded RNAs, referred to as guide strands, are incorporated into RNA silencing effectors complexes such as the RNA-induced silencing complex (RISC). These RNA silencing effector complexes contain Argonaute family proteins.

    Podcasts:

    PLAYLIST TIME:

    Who Said

    by: Beth Hirsch

    Different shapes of people
    Shaping their kinds of words
    To say the same thing
    Aching to wall with our backs straight
    No matter how many times
    You think you're ready...
    I thing it'd be really good
    If I could...be honest with you
    Instead of acting like
    In this I'm pleased
    But I'm busy
    Putting myself so far behind you
    Instead of hanging right here
    In the lead
    Who said I wouldn't want to ?
    Different shades of love
    Searching any kind of love
    To know the one love
    Aching to lie on our backs straight
    No matter...
    Darling, I think it'd be
    Searching any kind of love
    To know the one love
    Aching to lie on our backs straight
    No matter...
    Darling, I think it'd be
    Really good if we could
    Keep on doing what we're doing
    My new friend, exact, indeed
    Cause in the moment it's giving
    Everything we own
    Somehow in the next
    I'm freed
    Who said I wouldn't want you ?




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