It depends upon the protein and also where the deletion of the single amino acid has occurred. Does ur alter or disrupt an important fundamental function or aspect of the protein such as the capability of substrates to bind to the active site, or is near a region that is primarily for developing the additional structure of the protein and is not as important. In most cases, a single amino acid change will not cause the protein to lose its complete function of be denatured.
Answer:
True . It contains hundreds to thousands genes.
They both share the same function
Answer:
1st one is no, i think the second is no
Explanation:
hypothesis is an if-then statement and predictions are made based off the hypothesis
hypothesis ex: "if you get at least 6 hours of sleep, [then] you will get better grades on tests than if you get less sleep."
prediction: "i will get a lower grade if I get 2 hours of sleep than I will if I get 6 hours of sleep"
Crossing over gives the offspring sort of a genetic variation twist. This will mix our two genes and make them diverse, but together.