The awnser is true!! I hope this helped!
Here is the answer to this question:
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According to the </span>RNA<span> World </span>Hypothesis<span>, life later evolved to use DNA and proteins due to </span>RNA's<span> relative instability and poorer catalytic properties, and gradually, ribozymes became increasingly phased out. The ribosome, a large molecular machine that drives protein synthesis, is a ribozyme.
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I hope this helps you
Answer:
Citrate Synthase facilitates the formation of citrate by deprotonating Acetyl CoA and by protonating the carbonyl oxygen of oxaloacetate
Explanation:
Citrate synthase is a key enzyme in the citric acid cycle that functions to catalyze the formation of citrate from oxaloacetate and acetyl-CoA: acetyl-CoA + oxaloacetate + H2O >> citrate + CoA-SH (Coenzyme A ). This enzyme contains three amino acids at its active site that work together to catalyze the conversion of acetyl-CoA and oxaloacetate into citrate. This active site acts by abstracting (deprotonating) a proton from the alpha carbon of Acetyl CoA which serves as the nucleophile. Subsequently, the active site of the enzyme also protonates the carbonyl oxygen of oxaloacetate, which then suffers nucleophilic attack and thereby facilitating nucleophilic substitution reaction.
I think the answer is diabetes, specifically type 1.
D.uracil is the nitrogen base bind with adenine