DNA is basically the hard copy. It is double stranded and found in every cell. It contains a library of EVERY single protein that the body makes. Cells supress bits of the DNA because every protein does not apply to every cell.
<span>mRNA is the portable version that is taaken away from the hard copy to make the actual protein. It is single stranded and codes for 1 protein (although in bacteria one mRNA can code for many proteins). It is the actual bit that gets TRANSCRIBED in the nucleas (copied) and TRANSLATED (written) into proteins in the cytoplasm on ribosomes (which are incidently another form of RNA...rRNA). </span>
<span>DNA functions include getting copied to every daughter cell too
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I believe it would be glycolysis
Answer:
Remember: For DNA... t=a. a=t. c=g. g=c
Remember: For RNA...... u=a t=a a=u g=c c=g
When you spray... point The nasal spay towards your eyes in your nose and breathe as you spray amount needed...
Answer:
If you're talking about the cell: The nucleus contains the cell's chromosones
If you're talking about the atom: The nucleus contains protons and neutrons.
Explanation:
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