Answer:
The correct answer is that the spliceosome is non-functional.
Explanation:
A spliceosome refers to a composite and large molecular apparatus found mainly inside the nucleus of the eukaryotic cells. The prime function of the spliceosome is to remove the introns from a transcribed pre-mRNA, that is, a kind of primary transcript.
In case if the spliceosome machinery gets failed to function, the mRNA will not remove the introns, that is, the non-coding parts and retains it. This will eventually lead to the formation of longer mRNAs.
Answer:
Complete Tetanus
Explanation:
The nerve stimulus arrives at the fiber at such a rapid pace that there is no decrease in tension between stimuli detected. This results in a tectanic contraction that is fused (complete) . Thus the muscle fiber does not relax at all due to this complete tetanus.
Answer:
C
Explanation:
I'm honestly not sure, just looks like the right answer
Answer:
Adenine= 22%
Guanine= 28%
Cytosine = 28%
Explanation:
According to Chargaff rule, the amount of adenine in a double-stranded DNA is equal to the amount of thymine. This is due to the fact that adenine and thymine bases are complementary and form base pairs.
Likewise, the amount of guanine in a double-stranded DNA is equal to the amount of cytosine since guanine pairs with cytosine.
Given that percentage of thymine in a DNA sample = 22%
Percentage of adenine = 22%
Total percentage of adenine and thymine = 22+ 22 = 44%
Percentage total of guanine and cytosine bases = 100-44 = 56%
Percentage of guanine base in the DNA = 56 /2 = 28%
Percentage of cytosine base in the DNA = 28%
Answer:
The most common interaction between alleles is a dominant/recessive relationship. An allele of a gene is said to be dominant when it effectively overrules the other (recessive) allele. Eye colour and blood groups are both examples of dominant/recessive gene relationships.
The main difference between dominant and recessive trait is that dominant genes always passes the dominant behavior genes while the recessive ones pass the recessive behavior genes. In fact, the dominant genes are said to be more likely to pass to future generations, while the recessive ones are less likely to do that.
Explanation: