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a_sh-v [17]
3 years ago
11

Although many types of bacteria are helpful and do not cause disease nearly half of all human diseases are bacterial

Biology
1 answer:
k0ka [10]3 years ago
8 0
There are 5 major types of infectious bacteria
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How does antibiotic resistance arise? how do hospitals and feedlots contribute to this phenomenon?
Stella [2.4K]
<span>Antibiotic resistance arises due to the evolution of the organisms they are designed to destroy. Subsequent generations of such organisms develop resistance to the antibiotic. Hospitals' overuse of antibiotics quickens the process, as does the administration of antibiotics to feedlot cattle, whose meat is consumed by people.</span>
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3 years ago
you are feeling a lot of fear. the brain site most likely involved is the midbrain. the left hemisphere. the right hemisphere. t
melomori [17]
<span>You are feeling a lot of fear. the brain site most likely involved is the amygdala. </span>
3 0
3 years ago
PLEASE HELP!! in the process of translation, the ribosome is the site where---
Aleksandr [31]

Answer:

b

Explanation:

6 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Covalent bonds have a higher melting points than ionic bonds.<br><br> True<br> False
melomori [17]

Answer:

This statement is false.

Explanation:

Ionic bonds have relatively high melting and boiling points, compared to that of covalent bonds.

Ionic compounds have strong electrostatic bonds between oppositely charged ions. Covalent bonds, on the other hand, have weaker attractions between molecules.

Remember, the melting point, is simply the amount of heat (energy) it takes to break apart the molecular bonds. The stronger the bonds, the harder it will be to separate them!

Hope this helps! :)

8 0
4 years ago
5. Circle the three anti-codons at the
mixas84 [53]

Answer:

5. Circled in red on attachment

6. Green arrows on attachment

7. Orange box in the attachment

8. Circled red on attachment

9. Blue boxes on attachment

10. Black line on attachment

11. It has already disassociated

12. Purple rectangle in attachment

13. GAC

14. Leucine

Explanation:

I think most of this worksheet is to be completed on your own model of transcription that you have made, however, I will label the diagram

5. tRNA molecules bring amino acids to the ribosome. They are recognisable by their "cloverleaf" shape. In the picture, you can see that they are attached to amino acids (and you can even see some in the ribosome). The codons are on the opposite side of the tRNA to the amino acid, and are 3 bases complementary to the codon on the mRNA, represented here as 3 rectangles.

6. As described above, you can see some tRNAs in the ribosome. These tRNAs have paired up with complementary codons on the mRNA strand via their anti-codons. This is indicated by the green arrow. This is how the mRNA dictates the sequence of the polypeptide chain and makes protein

7. I think this question is just checking you know where the amino acid goes. The amino acid is attached to the opposite site of the anti-codon indicated in the image.

8. The anticodon in the tRNA has been indicated in question 5. Anticodons refer to three bases that are complementary to a specific codon on mRNA, and specify a particular amino acid

9. Each codon refers to each triplet of nucleotides in the mRNA. I have indicated this as blue boxes on the mRNA transcript. You can tell where they are based on where the tRNA is binding, always in 3s

10. See the black line, this is a called a peptide bond, and is the bond that joins together the amino acids in a growing polypeptide chain. I have drawn it between the first two amino acids in the second image. The amino acids represent a string of molecules linked using this peptide bond, which is a covalent bond formed by a condensation reaction

11. The first tRNA is not shown in the second diagram because the peptide bond has already formed between Valine and Histidine, so the tRNA that brought Valine to the machinery has disassociated from Valine and the ribosome. It is then free to bind another Valine and join in other translation processes

12. The third codon is CUG. We can see the first codon is GUG, then CAU, and the next is CUG. This is labelled with a purple rectangle in the attachment

13. Base pairing rules state that C pairs with G, and that A pairs with U (or T on DNA). The codon is CUG, therefore the anti-codon must be GAC

14. Each codon corresponds to a particular amino acid sequence. The codon CUG corresponds to the amino acid Leucine. You can find this using a codon table, like the one attached here

6 0
4 years ago
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