Water
This flowering plant does not wilt but stands straight up, reaching toward the sunlight, because its cells contain mostly water.
Water is ultimately important to the life of plants as it allows plants to perform its everyday processes by supplying plant’s essential nutrients. When a plant cell is filled with water, it pushes firmly against the cell walls. This effect is known as turgor pressure and it makes the structure of plants (stem tissues and leaves) to become rigid, allowing it to stand upright and prevent it from wilting.
Yeast to get glucose,
the cells must use active transport to move glucose up its concentration
gradient. Yeast cells take up glucose to use as their main source of energy.
Typically, glucose concentrations outside yeast cells are lower than glucose concentrations
inside the cells.
The corresponding DNA codon would be ATC.
The complementary DNA nucleotide for a:
RNA uracil is the adenine;
RNA adenine is the thymine;
RNA guanine is the cytosine.
Because a RNA strand is made from complementation of a DNA model-strand, when we have a RNA codon, the DNA codon that was in its origin is simply the combination of the three DNA nucleotides that are complementary to the RNA codon.