Answer:
Advantage: altering a component in the cell walls, causing the contents of the fungal cells to flow out and the cells to perish. inhibiting fungal cells from multiplying and expanding.
Disadvantage: An allergic response may cause swelling of your face, neck, or tongue, as well as breathing difficulties. a severe skin reaction, such as blistering or peeling. Loss of appetite, vomiting, nausea, jaundice, dark urine or pale feces, weariness, or weakness are all symptoms of liver impairment.
Answer:White blood cells, also called leukocytes or leucocytes, are the cells of the immune system that are involved in protecting the body against both infectious disease and foreign invaders. All white blood cells are produced and derived from multipotent cells in the bone marrow known as hematopoietic stem cells. Leukocytes are found throughout the body, including the blood and lymphatic system.
Explanation:
Answer:
Explanation:
What a Stem Cells?
Stem cells are the body's raw materials- cells from which all other cells with specialized functions are generated.
What are specialized cells?
Specialized cells perform specialized functions in multicellular organisms. Groups of specialized cells cooperate to form a tissue, such as a muscle.
What are unspecialized cells?
An unspecialized cell that can give rise to one or more different types of specialized cells, such as blood cells and nerve cells.
Do you think stem cell research should be allowed?
By watching stem cells mature into cells in bones, heart muscle, nerves, and other organs and tissue, researchers and doctors may better understand how diseases and conditions develop.
The complete question is:
An individual with genotype AA is crossed to an individual with genotype aa at the same genetic locus. The allele A is dominant to the allele a.
If the offspring are interbred through two generations, what is the predicted ratio of phenotypes in the F2 generation?
9:16 (dominant:recessive)
9:7 (dominant:recessive)
3:16 (dominant:recessive)
1:3 (dominant:recessive)
Answer:
3:1 dominant:recessive phenotype ratios
Explanation:
The recessive phenotype disappears in the F1 generation, but it reappears in the F2 at a ratio of 3:1, being therefore dominant:recessive