I think the best medium is agar. It is a jelly-like substance that is obtained from algae, and is used to culture small organisms such as microorganisms and bacteria.
Hope this helps. :)
<h2 /><h2>In situ hybridization</h2>
Explanation:
A)the cellular and tissue specific localization of the mRNA encoded by a particular gene
- In situ hybridization is a technique used to locate and detect nucleic acid sequences(DNA or RNA) with respect to their protein product within nuclei
- The principle behind in situ hybridization is that specific annealing(heat treatment process) of labelled probe to complementary sequences of target DNA or mRNA in a fixed specimen is done
- Probe is mainly used to find the complementary sequence of the nucleic acids(DNA or RNA) or helps in localization of particular clone
- The detection and visualization of the hybrids can be done by using cytological methods
Explanation:
The difference is; does aluminum breath oxygen?
2). does aluminum reproduce unassisted?
3). DNA
4). RNA
5) is aluminum made up of proteins?
6). do you need lipids to produce an aluminum can?
the answer is chemical makeup...
Typical methods of classroom scientific communication depending on the level of study could include a range of these activities which have been listed in the answers. However, at the elementary, middle, and high school levels it would be safe to argue that the typical methods of communication are B) lectures, lab reports, term papers, and poster presentations. At higher levels would some of the other methods of communication be used such as scientific journals, oral presentations, lectured, conferences, etc.