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slega [8]
4 years ago
5

Avery could barely detect sweetness in a sip of water from a pitcher in which one quarter of a teaspoon of sugar was mixed into

a half gallon of water. for taste, this is avery's:
Biology
1 answer:
Tamiku [17]4 years ago
6 0
The correct answer is absolute threshold.
Absolute threshold is a neurobiological term referring to the lowest level of a stimulus that a person is able to detect. The stimulus can either be touch, sound, taste or light.
Regarding taste, the absolute threshold of taste is the lowest concentration of a certain compound which can be detected by the human sense of taste. 
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8 0
4 years ago
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Using recombinant DNA techniques, you have replaced the trp operon's leader peptide open reading frame in Escherichia coli with
STatiana [176]

Answer:

Decreased transcription of structural genes of try operon irrespective of presence or absence of tryptophan. The leader sequence has a tryptophan codon in its sequence 1 that does not allow the formation of attenuator structure when tryptophan levels are low.

Explanation:

The leader peptide has a tryptophan codon in sequence 1. When tryptophan levels are low, translation of sequence 1 pauses at the tryptophan codon and the sequences 2 and 3 pair with each other. This does not allow pairing of sequences 3 and 4 and the formation of the attenuator is inhibited. Therefore, tryptophan operon is expressed when tryptophan levels are low.

When the leader peptide sequence is replaced with the one from phenylalanine operon, expression of tryptophan operon will be reduced. The replaced sequence lacks a tryptophan codon and therefore, the translation would not pause when the tryptophan levels are low. This would allow the ribosome to quickly translate the sequence 2. Sequences 3 and 4 will pair to form attenuator and the gene expression will be reduced irrespective of low levels of tryptophan.

8 0
4 years ago
Lynn has been waking up each night with intense pain in her calves. she does not feel that it is serious enough to seek medical
Tomtit [17]
Lynn probably has the tendon of her calves(achilles tendon) inflamed and it's suffering from a <span>tendinitis. Tendinitis can be caused by repeated movements of the same muscles,  like Lynn as been doing practicing all summer.
The answer is yes, the pain is related with constant exercise of her calves and the first thing she should do it's stop practicing.
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4 0
3 years ago
Type of macro molecule that most enzymes are in
kvasek [131]

Enzymes are protein macromolecules.

5 0
4 years ago
g This final question synthesizes your findings from many of the questions above. For each of the following scenarios… a. direct
hodyreva [135]

Answer:

See explanations

Explanation:

success (how many offspring an organism leaves in the next generation, relative to others in the group).

Natural selection can act on traits determined by alternative alleles of a single gene, or on polygenic traits (traits determined by many genes).

Natural selection on traits determined by multiple genes may take the form of stabilizing selection, directional selection, or disruptive selection.

Introduction

We've already met a few different mechanisms of evolution. Genetic drift, migration, mutation...the list goes on. All of these mechanisms can make a population evolve, or change in its genetic makeup over generations.

But there's one mechanism of evolution that's a bit more famous than the others, and that's natural selection. What makes natural selection so special? Out of all the mechanisms of evolution, it's the only one that can consistently make populations adapted, or better-suited for their environment, over time.

You may have already seen natural selection as part of Darwin’s theory of evolution. In this article, we will dive deeper – in fact, deeper than Darwin himself could go. We will examine natural selection at the level of population genetics, in terms of allele, genotype, and phenotype frequencies.

Quick review of natural selection

Here is a quick reminder of how a population evolves by natural selection:

Organisms with heritable (genetically determined) features that help them survive and reproduce in a particular environment tend to leave more offspring than their peers.

If this continues over generations, the heritable features that aid survival and reproduction will become more and more common in the population.

The population will not only evolve (change in its genetic makeup and inherited traits), but will evolve in such a way that it becomes adapted, or better-suited, to its environment.

Natural selection can cause microevolution

Natural selection acts on an organism’s phenotype, or observable features. Phenotype is often largely a product of genotype (the alleles, or gene versions, the organism carries). When a phenotype produced by certain alleles helps organisms survive and reproduce better than their peers, natural selection can increase the frequency of the helpful alleles from one generation to the next – that is, it can cause microevolution.

7 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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