Answer:
The correct option is <em>C. Different species can share the same common name.</em>
Explanation:
A single organism might have the many common names or it might happen that different species have the same common name in different parts of the world. Common names can be sued when people from the same country, speaking the same language are talking.
But as scientific research is carried out in all parts of the world, scientists made up the system of binomial nomenclature. Under this system, each specie is given a unique name .
Answer: Very unlikely
Explanation:
Generally, point mutation can be easily reversed by another point mutation, so
before any changes occur in the amino acid sequence, it would have been corrected.
However, when point mutation occurs within the protein coding region of a gene it may results in the change of a single nucleotide to cause the substitution of a different amino acid (which renders the protein non-functional) as in the case of sickle-cell disease.
And this kind of point mutation is specifically called Missense mutation.
Above all, because point mutation is easily reversible, it is very unlikely to change the amino acid sequence of a protein
I would say Probably a pharmacy, is she studied in Medicine that's what makes the most sense right?
(Sorry if I'm wrong hun!)
I think it has something to do with their polar-nonpolar makeup. They have a polar head and a nonpolar tail. Only the polar side bonds with water, so they form two layers so that the polar sides can stick out and bond with the water, while the nonpolar tails can face each other. Imagine this:
p------n n------p
p------n n------p
And outside the double layer are water molecules bonding with the polar part:
wwww p------n n------p wwww
<span>wwww p------n n------p wwww
</span>