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Vika [28.1K]
3 years ago
6

What's a node on a cladogram?

Biology
2 answers:
katen-ka-za [31]3 years ago
6 0

Answer:

A n0de corresponds to a hypothetical ancestor. A terminal node is the hypothetical last common ancestral interbreeding population of the taxon labeled at a tip of the cladogram. ... Each internal n0de is also at the base of a clade, which includes the common ancestral population (node) plus all its

Explanation:

decendants

densk [106]3 years ago
3 0

Answer:

The node therefore represents the end of the ancestral taxon and the stems , the species that split from the ancestor. The two taxa that split from the node are called sister taxa.

Explanation:

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What are the roles of the dna , the mRNA , the rRNA , and the tRNA in protein synthesis?
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DNA and RNA

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rRNA  

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The message carrying the information needed to make a particular polypeptide exists in the mRNA molecule. It binds with a ribosome and the ribosome starts reading it one codon - 3 consecutive mRNA bases - at a time. Each of the possible 64 codons codes for a particular amino acid, or for a release factor (in which case it is a STOP codon). So the order of bases in the mRNA specifies the order in which amino acids are linked together to form a polypeptide.  

tRNA  

A tRNA molecule has 2 main sites. At one end it has an amino-acid attachment site and on the opposite end it has a 3-base anticodon. An enzyme (an aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase) recognizes the type of tRNA and attaches the appropriate amino acid to it, at which point the tRNA is said to be charged. Charged tRNA molecules "bump into" the empty ribosome A site, but only if there is a complementary match between the mRNA codon associated with that site and the anticodon on the tRNA does the charged tRNA dock.


Hopefully, that's enough...

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