Answer: I don’t think I understand can you set this up differently so I can answer this please
Step-by-step explanation:
Answer:
4, 7 ,2
Step-by-step explanation:
Answer:
1. Such a substitution could: change a codon to one that encodes a different amino acid and cause a small change in the protein produced. For example, sickle cell anemia is caused by a substitution in the beta-hemoglobin gene, which alters a single amino acid in the protein produced.
2. A - Mutations are sometimes helpful, sometimes harmful, and sometimes neutral
Step-by-step explanation:
<span>Inflection points are where the function changes concavity. Since concave up corresponds to a positive second derivative and concave down corresponds to a negative second derivative, then when the function changes from concave up to concave down (or vise versa) the second derivative must equal zero at that point. So the second derivative must equal zero to be an inflection point. But don't get excited yet. You have to make sure that the concavity actually changes at that point.</span>