Answer: C). The protein formed from the mutated strand will be the same as the protein formed from the original strand.
Explanation: The two protons have the same amino acid sequence therefore, the mutated protein is the same with the protein formed from the original strand. This is because the two codons AAA and AAG codes for the amino acid lysine. A phenomenon whereby an amino acid is specified by more than one codon is known as degeneracy. This does not mean that the genetic code is flawed but each codon specifies only one amino acid. The degeneracy of the codes are not uniform, some amino acids are specified by one codon, while some are specified by more than one codons. For example, methionine and tryptophan have single codons, Leucine, serine and arginine have six codons, isoleucine has three codons, alanine, glycine, and threonine have four codons.
It is most likely Salmonella :)
It is 4 because you need to add the 0's
<span>Linoleic acid tends to be found in a great amount of foods in the modern diet. This type of fatty acid is found in vegetable oils, nuts, and seeds: with the high amount of items that are eaten from these food groups by the average person, the amount of linoleic acid consumed is typically far more than is required.</span>
1 is b or 1/4 (I'd recommend checking a punnet square too)