Answer: infant’s birthweight
Explanation:
Birth weight is the weight of the baby when born. A low weight is considered to be less than 5.5 pounds whereas a high weight is more than 8.8 pounds.
An infant born with low birth weight is too small, premature or both. This can happen due to many reasons such as health problems in mother, problems in the placenta, genetic factors, and drug used by the mother. The infant with low birth weight is susceptible to health problems. The infant may remain sick after birth or a few days after birth. The infant may suffer from delayed motor development.
An infant with a high birth weight than average is big because the parents are big, or the mother is diabetic during pregnancy. The infant may be at high risk of injuries during birth and problem with blood sugar.
<span>About 1,760 calories.</span>
Answer:the correct option will be
The virus forced the monkey cell to make proteins for its envelope.
Explanation:Enveloped viruses contain nucleocapsids of either icosahedral (e.g. herpesviruses, togavirus) or helical symmetry (e.g. influenza). The outer envelope is a lipid bilayer derived from host cell membrane in which both viral glycoproteins and some host proteins are embedded.
Many enveloped viruses complete their replication cycle by forming vesicles that bud from the plasma membrane. Some viruses encode “late” (L) domain motifs that are able to hijack host proteins involved in the vacuolar protein sorting (VPS) pathway, a cellular budding process that gives rise to multi vesicular bodies and that is topologically equivalent to virus budding. Although many enveloped viruses share this mechanism, examples of viruses that require additional viral factors and viruses that appear to be independent of the VPS pathway have been identified. Alternative mechanisms for virus budding could involve other topologically similar process such as cell abscission, which occurs following cytokinesis, or virus budding could proceed spontaneously as a result of lipid microdomain accumulation of viral proteins. Further examination of novel virus-host protein interactions and characterization of other enveloped viruses for which budding requirements are currently unknown will lead to a better understanding of the cellular processes involved in virus assembly and budding.