1answer.
Ask question
Login Signup
Ask question
All categories
  • English
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies
  • Business
  • History
  • Health
  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Computers and Technology
  • Arts
  • World Languages
  • Spanish
  • French
  • German
  • Advanced Placement (AP)
  • SAT
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Engineering
AnnyKZ [126]
2 years ago
7

If a sperm containing 46 chromosomes fused with an egg

Biology
1 answer:
oksian1 [2.3K]2 years ago
4 0

Answer:

Explanation: yes would cause problems with the embryo because a sperm and egg have 23 chromosomes each half mom half dad.

You might be interested in
One form of chromatin modification is acetylation, which is known to occur on positively charged histone tail amino acids, thus
Naya [18.7K]

Answer:

A. The tails do not interact with the DNA

Explanation:

The acetylation refers to the transfer of the acetyl group from Acetyl-CoA to the N-terminal of the histone protein.

Lysine residues (positively charged amino acid) are present at the end of the N-terminal of the histone protein which is neutralized by the acetyl group.

This loses the compaction between the positively charged histone and the negatively charged DNA and the DNA becomes more relaxed. This relaxed state allows the transcription factors to easily bind the DNA and therefore the DNA becomes transcriptionally active.

Thus, Option-A is correct

4 0
2 years ago
How is the heat energy required to warm the body created?
jeka94
<span>I think its made of  food oxidation.</span>
6 0
3 years ago
cehgg Bone is an anisotropic tissue that supports higher loads in the longitudinal direction, due to the high level of organizat
Ann [662]

Answer:

Bone is a live tissue which is responsible for sustaining the human body. It can grow and self-repair. Bones are submitted to the action of the muscles loads and the gravity. Long bones, as femurs, for instance, provide stability and support for a person to remain standing or walking.

Many researches have been done in Biomechanics area. In order to position this paper along with the other bone anisotropy papers, a short overview of the Biomechanical works were provided, freely classifying them in different areas/approaches. Among the papers that deal with the bone anisotropy, there are those that describe the structural bone details. These papers are named here as micro/nano papers, as in (Carnelli et al. 2013) and in (Baumann et al. 2012). Others papers only consider the macroscopic effects and are named here as macro papers, as it is this manuscript. There are papers that use Finite Element software to model bone, named here as numerical papers, as in (Kenedi and Vignoli 2014), in (San Antonio et al. 2012) like this manuscript. Other papers use theoretical/analytical methodologies, as mechanics of solids, theory of elasticity, homogeneization theory and so on. These papers are named here as analytical papers, as in (Toridis 1969) like this manuscript as well. Experimental approaches can be also used, through the utilization of sensors/transducers to measure diverse mechanical characteristics of bones, as for instance, to obtain better elastic material constants to describe such a complex material as bone. These papers are named here as experimental papers, as in (Allena and Clusel 2014). Also there are papers that cover two or more areas; these papers are named here as multi-area papers.

2 MATERIAL ANISOTROPY

Bones, from a macroscopic point of view, can be classified as non-homogeneous, porous and anisotropic tissue, (Doblaré et al. 2004). At a human femur cortical and trabecular bone tissues can coexist, although for the medial cross section analyzed in this work only cortical bone is present. It is very difficult to obtain experimentally bone elastic mechanical properties. Some authors like (Taylor et al. 2002) have obtained orthotropic bone elastic properties indirectly, through the utilization of modal analysis and Finite Element Method approaches. To overcome this difficulty authors like (Jones 1998) and (Krone and Schuster 2006) present different constitutive relationships to model bone behavior, among them, there are three constitutive relationships that are especially important for this work: the isotropic, the transversally isotropic and the orthotropic.

The isotropic materials have only two independent mechanical elastic constants, the Young modulus E and the Poisson ratio ν. The transversally isotropic materials have five independent mechanical elastic constants, two Young modulli, one shear modulus and two Poisson ratios. The orthotropic materials have nine independent mechanical elastic constants, three Young modulli, three shear modulli and three Poisson ratios, (Jones 1998).

These mechanical elastic constants are placed at the stiffness matrixS, which relates stresses and strains. Hooke's law can also be written in a different form using a compliance matrix C as

 

where ejr are the strain components,Cjrlm are the compliance matrix components and τlm are the stress components. Note thate, C and τ are tensors.

The geometric compatibility and the equilibrium equations are represented, respectively, by equations (2) and (3)

 

 

where u are the displacements, x are the coordinates and f are the body forces. Also note that these equations can be expanded according to the coordinate system.

At next section the analytical model is described in details. The principal stresses and principal strains expressions are explicitly presented as well as the correspondent principal angles.

5 0
2 years ago
How is the Great Barrier Reef’s population affected by abiotic factors?
Evgen [1.6K]
The Great Barrier Reef, located off of Australia’s eastern coast, is the largest coral reef ecosystem in the world. The reef covers an area over 300,000 square kilometers and includes a wide range of ocean depth, and it contains such biodiversity as to make it one of the most complex ecosystems on Earth. Much like any other ecosystem on Earth, the Great Barrier Reef relies on biotic and abiotic components to keep it functional and stable.
7 0
3 years ago
What is the role of DNA polymerase in DNA replication
JulsSmile [24]
The main function of DNA polymerase<span> is to make </span>DNA<span> from nucleotides, the building blocks of </span>DNA<span>. There are several forms of </span>DNA polymerase<span> that play a </span>role <span>in </span>DNA replication<span> and they usually work in pairs to copy one molecule of double-stranded </span>DNA<span> into two new double stranded </span>DNA<span> molecules.]</span>
3 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Other questions:
  • 4. For your organ system, describe how the system works at the tissue level. mine is the digestive system
    15·2 answers
  • Plants maintain homeostasis by _____.
    5·2 answers
  • Sort each item into the appropriate bin based on which type of spectrum it represents.
    11·1 answer
  • Explain the importance of open-mindedness and skepticism in scientific thinking
    10·1 answer
  • You are enjoying a spring day but expect a storm to arrive soon. As the storm arrives and the rain begins to fall, you notice th
    12·1 answer
  • (H2PO4)- is a base. Which is its conjugate acid?<br>H2PO4-​
    5·1 answer
  • When a person gets dehydrated while exercising on a hot day, their pituitary gland releases adh, a hormone that signals the kidn
    9·1 answer
  • The anatomical term for eye is<br>​
    14·2 answers
  • How do<br> you<br> think<br> your<br> food sources<br> compare to the breakdown
    8·2 answers
  • Please answer asap due in 10 mins giving brainiest
    14·2 answers
Add answer
Login
Not registered? Fast signup
Signup
Login Signup
Ask question!