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Alexxandr [17]
3 years ago
14

Scientists classify organisms into categories according to their shared characteristics. The most current system of classificati

on sorts organisms into kingdoms first. Then, each kingdom is further sorted into different phyla, classes, orders, families, genera, and species. What is the name of this system of classification?
A. the Linnaean system
B. the Mendel system
C. the Darwin system
D. the Pasteur system
Biology
2 answers:
Alinara [238K]3 years ago
7 0

Answer:

A. the Linnaean system

Explanation:

olga nikolaevna [1]3 years ago
4 0
The answer is A. 
Hope this helps! 
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What are the landmarks necessary for processing rna in eukaryotes?
professor190 [17]
I hope u will love it...

Eukaryotic mRNA Processing

Unlike prokaryotes which have one RNA polymerase that makes all classes of RNA molecules, eukaryotic cells have three types of RNA polymerase (called RNA pol I, RNA pol II, and RNA pol III), and each type of RNA is made by its own polymerase:

RNA polymerase I makes ribosomal RNA (rRNA)
RNA polymerase II makes messenger RNA (mRNA)
RNA polymerase III makes transfer RNA (tRNA)

Moreover, RNAs are made in the nucleus of a eukaryotic cell, but function in protein synthesis in the cytoplasm. Unlike prokaryotic mRNAs, eukaryotic mRNAs undergo extensive modifications after synthesis by RNA polymerase II. These changes include capping,polyadenylation, and splicing.

Capping

Modification of the 5'-ends of eukaryotic mRNAs is called capping. The cap consists of a methylated GTP linked to the rest of the mRNA by a 5' to 5' triphosphate "bridge"(Figure 28.30). Capping occurs very early during the synthesis of eukaryotic mRNAs, even before mRNA molecules are finished being made by RNA polymerase II. Capped mRNAs are very efficiently translated by ribosomes to make proteins. In fact, some viruses, such as poliovirus, prevent capped cellular mRNAs from being translated into proteins. This enables poliovirus to take over the protein synthesizing machinery in the infected cell to make new viruses.

Polyadenylation

Modification of the 3'-ends of eukaryotic mRNAs is called polyadenylation (Figure BR). Polyadenylation is the addition of several hundred A nucleotides to the 3' ends of mRNAs. All eukaryotic mRNAs destined to get a poly A tail (note: most, but not all, eukaryotic mRNAs get such a tail) contain the sequence AAUAAA about 11-30 nucleotides upstream to where the tail is added. AAUAAA is recognized by an endonuclease that cuts the RNA, allowing the tail to be added by a specific enzyme:polyA polymerase.

Splicing

Eukaryotic genes are often interrupted by sequences that do not appear in the final RNA. The intervening sequences that are removed are called introns. The process by which introns are removed is referred to assplicing. The sequences remaining after the splicing are called exons. All of the different major types of RNA in a eukaryotic cell can have introns. Although most higher eukaryotic genes have introns, some do not. Higher eukaryotes tend to have a larger percentage of their genes containing introns than lower eukaryotes, and the introns tend to be larger as well. The pattern of intron size and usage roughly follows the evolutionary tree, but this is only a general tendency. The humantitin gene has the largest number of exons (178), the longest single exon (17,106 nucleotides) and the longest coding sequence (80,781 nucleotides = 26,927 amino acids). The longest primary transcript, however, is produced by the dystrophin gene (2.4 million nucleotides).

RNA-DNA Hybridization Reveals Spliced-out Introns

RNA splicing was discovered during analysis of adenovirus mRNA synthesis. In these studies, the abundant viral mRNA encoding the major virion capsid protein, called hexon, was isolated by gel electrophoresis of cytoplasmic polyadenylated RNA. To map the region of the viral DNA coding for hexon mRNA, researchers hybridized the isolated mRNA to the coding strand and the RNA-DNA hybrid was visualized in the electron microscope (Figure BL). Three loops of single-stranded DNA (A, B, and C) were observed; these correspond to the three introns in the hexon gene. Since these intron sequences in the viral genomic DNA are not present in mature hexon nRNA, they loop out between the exon sequences that hybridize to their complementary sequences in the mRNA.

Similar analyses of hybrids between RNA isolated from the nuclei of infected cells and viral DNA revealed RNAs that were coliner withe the viral DNA (primarly transcripts) and RNAs with one or two of the introns removed (processing intermediates). These results, together with the findings that the 5' cap and 3' poly-A tail of mRNA precoursors are retained in mature cytoplasmic mRNAs, led to the realization that introns are removed from primary transcripts as exons are spliced together. For short transcription units, RNA splicing usually follows cleavage and polyadenylation of the 3' end of the primary transcript. But for long transcription units containing multiple exons, splicing of exons in the nascent RNA sometimes begins before transcription of the gene is complete.

Splice Site in Pre-mRNAs Exhibit Short, Conserved Sequences

5 0
3 years ago
1. How do artificial stabilization and development impact shorelines? Explain.
lora16 [44]

Explanation:

1.

Natural shorelines are the undeveloped fringe areas along the edge of a waterbody, which connect the shallow aquatic portion of the waterbody with adjacent upland. These riparian areas provide important environmental functions, such as regulating water quality (including temperature, clarity, nutrients, and contaminants) and sustaining critical habitat for a variety of aquatic and terrestrial organisms (including invertebrates, fish, amphibians, reptiles, shorebirds and waterfowl, and mammals).

For decades, "traditional" shoreline stabilization methods have centered on "hard" construction approaches such as vertical concrete, metal, or wood break-walls, gabions (stone-filled wire baskets) and rip rap (loose rocks or stones). Biologists and engineers now realize that in addition to creating a physical barrier, these hardened vertical or near-vertical structures reflect wave energy rather than absorb it, thereby worsening turbulence and increasing erosion in front of, under and adjacent to the "fix".

The effects of turbulence and erosion are not as severe when rip rap is used because it absorbs some of the energy from moving water. However, depending on its size and placement, rip rap still can create a barrier to many wildlife species, and, as with solid structures, reduces vegetated habitat.

The adverse effects of traditional shoreline stabilization methods can be significant, as hard erosion-control solutions do not provide the water quality or habitat benefits of a natural or restored vegetated shoreline.

2.

New ecology research reports that different ski slope construction methods can greatly impact mountainside ecology. Grading removes more vegetation than clearing and makes the soil less conducive for plant growth, which results in more erosion.

Conclusion

Is artificial stabilization and development really working?

Methods such as seawalls do actually help to protect shorelines from being flooded by strong waves, but if the wave bounces off the wall, there will.be more erosion.

Developers continue to attempt to protect our terrain but it is most likely not helping as much as they hoped it would.

4 0
4 years ago
Why do chicken eggs grow larger compared to other eggs?
Aloiza [94]

Answer:

Chicken eggs grow larger compared to other eggs due to their relative body sizes.

Explanation:

Egg laying and the size of an egg is relative to the size of the organism. So an ostrich lays a really large egg because it is a larger animal and can handle that size. Whereas a bluebird lays a small egg because it is a small bird.

8 0
4 years ago
NEED THIS QUICKLY PLZ!<br><br> What is the function of a leaf’s cuticle?
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A plant cuticle is a protecting film covering the epiderms of leaves, young shoots and other other aerial plant organs with out periderm. It consists of lipid and hydrocarbon polymers impregnated with was and is synthesized exclusively by the epidermal cells.
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Carry blood away from the lungs - it's the only artery that brings blood into the heart instead of away.
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