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grigory [225]
3 years ago
15

Dark adaptation ________. Dark adaptation ________. primarily involves improvement of acuity and color vision involves accumulat

ion of rhodopsin results in inhibition of rod function is much faster than light adaptation
Biology
1 answer:
I am Lyosha [343]3 years ago
6 0

Answer:

involves accumulation of rhodopsin

Explanation:

This is because dark adaptation is the ability of the eye to react to low light sensitivity and all the rod pigments of the eye bleached out which is as a result to the bright light and this make the rods nonfunctional in the initial state . Once you are in the dark, rhodopsin regenerates and tthis lead to increase in retina sensitive continuously.

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A new microorganism has been isolated from hot springs in Yellowstone National Park. It consists of single cells, which appear t
horsena [70]

Answer:

Bacteria

Explanation:

Bacteria are a group of single celled organisms that are neither plants or animals.

Bacteria lack cell organelles such as the nucleus and the chlorophyll.

They can be found in many environments and most of them are adapted to survive in extreme environments such as hot-springs where the temperatures are extremely high.

Unlike the plant cell wall, bacterial cell wall has a layer of peptidoglucan which determines their shape. Their cytoplasm contains both DNA and RNA.

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4 years ago
Structurally, DNA and RNA nucleotides are similar, although their three basic components differ slightly. One way DNA and RNA di
julsineya [31]
These are some notes I took on DNA and RNA. Hope it helps :)

Just about every biochemical reaction that takes place in your cells is made possible by proteins. Proteins in the form of hormones send signals to your cells about what to do and when to do it. For example, the protein insulin helps cells control your blood sugar levels. Proteins in the retina of your eye, called rhodopsin, are what receive light and send that information along. Proteins in your blood, called hemoglobin, carry oxygen to every cell in your body. When something in your body needs to be done, proteins do it.


Proteins are assembled in the cytoplasm by ribosomes. DNA, which has all the genetic information needed to make these proteins, is located in the nucleus of a eukaryotic cell (or in the nucleoid of a prokaryotic cell).

So how does the information in DNA get translated into the actions of the proteins? How do the instructions get from the nucleus to the ribosome? The answer is RNA, or ribonucleic acid.

DNA makes RNA makes protein. This is the process by which genetic information in the nucleus gets translated into all the actions needed to keep your cells working and keep you alive. Let’s take a closer look at how this happens.


The genetic information in DNA is a kind of code. Each individual (except identical twins) has a unique DNA sequence, or code, and every cell in a multicellular organism has the exact same DNA sequence in its nucleus (with a few exceptions). The sequence of DNA determines the structure of the proteins made by the cell.

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Look at the simple code shown here. Each number stands for a letter of the alphabet. In this code, numbers represent letters. (The number 27 represents a space between letters.)

In the DNA code, different groups of chemicals represent the different building blocks of proteins.


activity.page.layout.section.text



RNA Reads and Carries the Code

RNA is a molecule that is very similar in structure to DNA. In fact, RNA is so similar to DNA that RNA can store an exact copy  of the information that is in a DNA sequence. RNA can then transport that copy of the information to the ribosomes.


activity.page.layout.section.text



Ribosomes Use the Code

Once the RNA gets to the ribosomes, another kind of RNA reads the coded sequence and decodes it. It uses that information to string together the amino acids that are the building blocks of proteins. At the ribosome, the unique sequence of RNA (which is a copy of the DNA) is decoded into a unique sequence of amino acids to make a protein. 


activity.page.layout.section.text



DNA to RNA to Protein

The DNA in the nucleus (or nucleoid) contains all the instructions a cell uses to produce the proteins it needs.

The instructions in the DNA are transported from the nucleus to the ribosomes by RNA.

The instructions are used to assemble the cell’s proteins at the ribosomes.

You could say that the genetic information in the cell flows from DNA to RNA to protein.



5 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
7. Compare and contrast the roles and structures of DNA<br>and RNA​
Rzqust [24]

Answer: dna and rna have four nitrogenous three of which they share Cytosine, Adenine, and Guanine the differs between the rna has Uracil and the dna has thymine but dna is doubled  stranded and rna is single stranded

Thymine

Explanation:

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Nationalists argued that expansion could provide new resources because the export industry was suffering.
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A thesis statement is a sentence that ___?
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Claims what you are going to talk about

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