Answer:
in explanation
Explanation:
I'd say one species can become two different species by mating. If one species mates with a different species than they carry their genes over to the baby. This would become a repeating cycle making another species.
I don't know if this was the answer you were looking for, but this how animal breeders get a certain type of animal.
Answer:
Thanks for you question. Your hypothesis suggests a linear relationship between serum Cholesterol levels and MI. This hypothesis seems to ignore the difference in the prevalence and effectiveness of LDL receptors in the FH patient.
FH patients who have inherited the mutation from both parents have very few LDL receptors in their blood and therefore almost no ability to pass the unused Cholesterol through the liver. FH patients who are heterozygous will have more LDL receptors although both will find Cholesterol removal problematic without the addition of a PCSK9 inhibitor.
In short, your hypothesis need to account for other factors that are in play.
Explanation:
Consider my case. I am a 64 year old male who has Heterozygous Familial Hypercholesterolemia. Before treatment at age 12 my Total cholesterol was 510 mg/dl. My genetic testing shows two mutations to the LDL Receptor gene with only one mutation being pathogenic. My first heart attack was at 47 and first stroke at 62. My current LDL is too low to detect with the use of a PCSK9 inhibitor (Repatha®).
I believe your right C seems like the best choice to me.
More will compete for trade
Answer:
From animals they need energy to get it fungi they can make it
Explanation: