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No Longer Polymer (NLP):
No Longer Polymers (NLP), REACH

A NLP is a substance which was considered as notified under Article 8 (1) of the 6th amendment of Directive 67/548/EEC (and hence did not have to be notified under that Directive), but which does not meet the REACH definition of a polymer (which is the same as the polymer definition introduced by the 7th amendment of Directive 67/548/EEC) (Source: REACH)

polymer

substance consisting of molecules characterised by the sequence of one or more types of monomer units. Such molecules must be distributed over a range of molecular weights wherein differences in the molecular weight are primarily attributable to differences in the number of monomer units. A polymer compromises the following:
(a) a simple weight majority of molecules containing at least three monomer units which are covalently bound to at least one other monomer unit or other reactant
(b) less than a simple weight majority of molecules of the same molecular weight.
In the context of this definition a "monomer unit" means the reacted form of a monomer substance in a polymer. (Source: REACH, Article 3 (5))

polymerase chein reaction (PCR

PCR is a method for amplifying a DNA base sequence using a heat-stable polymerase and two 20-base primers, one complementary to the (+) strand at one end of the sequence to be amplified and one complementary to the (-) strand at the other end. Because the newly synthesized DNA strands can subsequently serve as additional templates for the same primer sequences, successive rounds of primer annealing, strand elongation, and dissociation produce rapid and highly specific amplification of the desired sequence. PCR also can be used to detect the existence of the defined sequence in a DNA sample.

Source: http://www.ornl.gov/sci/techresources/Human_Genome/glossary/glossary.shtml#modelorganisms