<u>The ethical issues associated with the medical use of DNA technology:</u>
- Patient identification is one of the major ethical issues.
- There should be a legal signed consent by the person who is being used for the test.
- Also, DNA technology or genetic tests may expose the person to any life-threatening illness.
- It may expose some risks of diseases in the future which may lead to anxiety and depression in the person.
- Genetic tests may allow diagnosis of eye color or other traits in the embryo.
Answer:
Advantages:
Low Level Irradiation kills bacteria and parasites.
The Nutrition value of of irradiated food is the same as regular food with less bacteria.
Irradiation makes fruits and vegetables riper and spoil slower.
Disadvantages:
Irradiation will increase cost of food.
The percentage of radiation as always being negative will also make
Irradiated food are not widely available yet.
To give a direct answer, I’d have to know what gene we were looking at. However, in a general sense, when a genotype has two capital letters, it means that it’s homozygous dominant. Take for example:
R= tall stalk
r= short stalk
The uppercase R is a dominant allele, which means if the plant has the gene with this in it (RR or Rr) then it will have that trait. If it has two lowercase letters (rr) then it will be the recessive trait.
Using this example, RR would be the tall stalk. For whatever your question is, the dominant phenotype would be the answer.
Answer:
Proliferative phase
Explanation:
Uterine cycle is part of the menstrual cycle in which changes occur in the reproductve female system in order to prepare female on possible pregnacy. Uterine cycle isdivided into three phases:
- Menstrual phase-characterized by the process of menstruation
- Proliferative phase-estogen causes the production of new endomethrium layer (thickening of the endomethrium)
- Secretory phase-characterized by the production of progesteron which prepares endomethrium for the implementation.
It will increase blood
pH. This is because pCO2 also reduces. pCO2 is critical in the <span>maintenance of blood pH. Dissolved CO2 from respiring
tissues dissolves in blood to form carbonic acid. The carbonic acid partially dissociated
into H+ ions and its conjugate base (bicarbonate ions). Carbonic anhydrase
catalyzes the formation of carbonic acid (in tissues) and vice versa (in the lungs).
In the lungs, the carbon dioxide is expelled. </span>