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Vika [28.1K]
3 years ago
13

Can a female be a carrier for colorblindness? Explain.

Biology
2 answers:
Pie3 years ago
7 0

Answer: Women can be carriers of the color blind gene and pass the mutation down the family line. If only the father is color blind, there is a 100% chance that his daughters will carry the gene, but they will not be color blind themselves.

I hope i helped and can i pwease have brainliest if it is ok with u?=33

11111nata11111 [884]3 years ago
3 0

Answer:

Women can be carriers of the color blind gene and pass the mutation down the family line. If only the father is color blind, there is a 100% chance that his daughters will carry the gene, but they will not be color blind themselves. His sons will neither carry the gene nor be color blind.

Explanation:

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What are the characteristics of most unsaturated fatty acids found within a human cell?.
Artemon [7]

The characteristics of most unsaturated fatty acids found within a human cell are deprotonated carboxylic acid and cis double bonds.

  • With the exception of steroids, fatty acids are carboxylic acids that provide the structural foundation of fats, oils, and all other types of lipids. More than 70 have been found in the natural world.
  • They are typically unbranched, contain an even number of carbon atoms (often 12–20), and can be divided into groups based on the existence and quantity of carbon–carbon double bonds.
  • As a result, saturated fatty acids don't have any carbon-to-carbon double bonds, while monounsaturated fatty acids have one, and polyunsaturated fatty acids have two or more.

learn more about unsaturated fatty acids here: brainly.com/question/3007736

#SPJ4

4 0
2 years ago
In this activity, you will write an article explaining, in everyday terminology, the process of protein synthesis. You will expl
Dmitriy789 [7]

Answer:

Take a moment to look at your hands. The bone, skin, and muscle you see are made up of cells. And each of those cells contains many millions of proteins^1  

As a matter of fact, proteins are key molecular "building blocks" for every organism on Earth!

How are these proteins made in a cell? For starters, the instructions for making proteins are "written" in a cell’s DNA in the form of genes. If that idea is new to you, you may want to check out the section on DNA to RNA to protein (central dogma) before getting into the nitty-gritty of building proteins.

Basically, a gene is used to build a protein in a two-step process:

Step 1: transcription! Here, the DNA sequence of a gene is "rewritten" in the form of RNA. In eukaryotes like you and me, the RNA is processed (and often has a few bits snipped out of it) to make the final product, called a messenger RNA or mRNA.

Step 2: translation! In this stage, the mRNA is "decoded" to build a protein (or a chunk/subunit of a protein) that contains a specific series of amino acids. [What exactly is an "amino acid"?]

The central dogma of molecular biology states that information flows from DNA (genes) to mRNA through the process of transcription, and then to proteins through the process of translation.

The central dogma of molecular biology states that information flows from DNA (genes) to mRNA through the process of transcription, and then to proteins through the process of translation.

_Image modified from "Central dogma of molecular biochemistry with enzymes," by Daniel Horspool (CC BY-SA 3.0). The modified image is licensed under a CC BY-SA 3.0 license._

In this article, we'll zoom in on translation, getting an overview of the process and the molecules that carry it out.

The genetic code

During translation, a cell “reads” the information in a messenger RNA (mRNA) and uses it to build a protein. Actually, to be a little more techical, an mRNA doesn’t always encode—provide instructions for—a whole protein. Instead, what we can confidently say is that it always encodes a polypeptide, or chain of amino acids.

[Wait, what is the difference?]

Genetic code table. Each three-letter sequence of mRNA nucleotides corresponds to a specific amino acid, or to a stop codon. UGA, UAA, and UAG are stop codons. AUG is the codon for methionine, and is also the start codon.

Genetic code table. Each three-letter sequence of mRNA nucleotides corresponds to a specific amino acid, or to a stop codon. UGA, UAA, and UAG are stop codons. AUG is the codon for methionine, and is also the start codon.

In an mRNA, the instructions for building a polypeptide are RNA nucleotides (As, Us, Cs, and Gs) read in groups of three. These groups of three are called codons.

There are 616161 codons for amino acids, and each of them is "read" to specify a certain amino acid out of the 202020 commonly found in proteins. One codon, AUG, specifies the amino acid methionine and also acts as a start codon to signal the start of protein construction.

There are three more codons that do not specify amino acids. These stop codons, UAA, UAG, and UGA, tell the cell when a polypeptide is complete. All together, this collection of codon-amino acid relationships is called the genetic code, because it lets cells “decode” an mRNA into a chain of amino acids.

Each mRNA contains a series of codons (nucleotide triplets) that each specifies an amino acid. The correspondence between mRNA codons and amino acids is called the genetic code.

5'

AUG - Methionine

ACG - Threonine

GAG - Glutamate

CUU - Leucine

CGG - Arginine

AGC - Serine

UAG - Stop

3'

To see how cells make proteins, let's divide translation into three stages: initiation (starting off), elongation (adding on to the protein chain), and termination (finishing up).

Getting started: Initiation

3 0
3 years ago
PLEASE HELP ASAP!! WILL MARK BRAINLIEST TO THE 1ST ONE WHO ANSWERS CORRECTLY! Some organisms have a large geographic range. For
Katyanochek1 [597]

Answer:

genomes compared and what can these findings tell us about how the overall ... genome sequences of different species — human, mouse, and a wide variety of other ... Comparative genomics also provides a powerful tool for studying ... alignment that the information that can be gained by comparing two genomes so yes it is possible

Explanation:

4 0
4 years ago
The role of the cell membrane is most like the job of which person?
mamaluj [8]

Answer:

The officer that allows people in and out of the crime scene.

Explanation:

The cell membrane chooses what comes in and out of the cell, therefore the officer would be most similar to the job of the cell membrane.

5 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
When completing the water properties lab, which property of water was reasonable for the water molecules sticking to the penny?
BaLLatris [955]

Answer:

Water has adhesive force between it's molecules and the penny s molecules

Explanation:

Hope it helps

8 0
4 years ago
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