Answer:
uracil, adenine, cytosine
Explanation:
The anticodon of tRNA binds to the triplet codon of mRNA. Adenine of tRNA would pair with uracil of mRNA codon. Uracil of the tRNA anticodon would pair with adenine of the mRNA codon. Similarly, the guanine of the tRNA anticodon binds to the cytosine of the mRNA codon. The codons of mRNA are read from 5' to the 3' direction. And the polarity of the anticodon of tRNA is opposite to that of the mRNA codons. Therefore, if a tRNA anticodon has a sequence of "Adenine, Uracil, Guanine", it would pair with the mRNA codon with a sequence "uracil, adenine, cytosine".
Because of the chlorophyll in them, more known as the little things called chloroplasts
It’s part of the upper mantle just below the lithosphere. Rocks in the asthenosphere are “plastic” meaning they can flow in response to deformation (like silly putty). It’s highly viscous, mechanically weak and ductilely deforming region of the the upper mantle.
Answer:
This question is incomplete
Explanation:
This question is incomplete because of the absence of the diagram mentioned in the question. However, when the diagram is viewed, identify/label single unit (of a molecule) that is repeated as monomer. The entire stretch of the repeated units (monomers) should be labelled as polymer.
NOTE:
Monomers are simple units/building blocks of polymers. For example, glucose molecule (in a dextran) is a monomer and ethene (in polythene) is a monomer
Polymers are large molecules consisting of repeated units of monomers. Examples are polysaccharides (such as dextran) and polythene