Answer:
The answer is C. The GPS makes a task easier
Answer:
Its C
Explanation:
Answer:
Explanation:
The question is not complete. Remaining part of the question is as follows - Minimal growth medium for bacteria such as E. coli includes various salts with characteristic concentrations in the mM range and a carbon source. The carbon source is typically glucose and it is used at 0.5% (a concentration of 0.5 g/100 mL). For nitrogen, minimal medium contains ammonium chloride (NH4Cl) with a concentration of 0.1g/100 mL
How many cells can be grown in a 5 mL culture using minimal medium before the medium exhausts the carbon?
Solution -
We will first find the mass concentration of 0.5 g/100 mL of solution.
gram per ml of glucose
The chemical formula of glucose is
The molecular weight of glucose molecule is grams per mole
Now, we will find the number of moles of glucose in a 5 ml medium -
mole
The number of carbon atom in each glucose molecule is equal to six, thus, number of minimal carbon mole is equal to
mole
Number of carbon atoms is equal to
Carbons
One bacteria has carbon molecule.Thus, ml medium will have bacteria
Repulsion between negatively charged backbone of DNA double helix van der Waals interaction
Interaction between water and carbonyl oxygen of guanine hydrogen bond
Answer:
Interaction between hydrophobic (nonpolar) amino acid side chains is due to hydrophobic interactions.
Repulsion between negatively charged backbone of DNA double helix is due to electrostatic repulsion forces.
Interaction between water and carbonyl oxygen of guanine is due hydrogen bonding
Explanation:
The hydrophobic effect refers to the tendency of non-polar substances forms aggregates in an aqueous solutions in order to avoid interactions with water molecules. This results in a favorable entropy increase.
For non-polar amino acids, hydrophobic interactions are important in stabilizing their structure wherein they are densely packed within the core of a protein while those with with polar groups are found in the exterior.
The phosphate backbone of DNA is negatively charged. Since like charges repel, therefore, electrostatic repulsion forces of the ions are responsible the repulsion of the backbone DNA double helix.
Hydrogen bonds are formed between electronegative oxygen atoms and hydrogen atoms of neighboring molecules due to the partial negative and positive charges on each of the atoms.
This hydrogen bonding is responsible for the interaction between water and carbonyl oxygen of guanine as the hydrogen atoms of the water molecules are attracted to the oxygen atoms of the guanine molecules due to the partial charges on each of the atoms.
Answer:
Genetic drift is referred to the changes in allele frequency in a gene pool. Gene flow is the process of alleles moving from one population to another.
Explanation:
Answer:
these statements are true
B) Insertions or deletions of single base-pairs within a protein coding sequence probably change the amino acid sequence
D) Missense mutations always change the amino acid sequence encoded by a gene
E) Nucleotide substitutions outside of the coding sequence can affect the expression of a gene.
Explanation:
B) insertion or deletion of nucleotide in coding region of DNA can change the amino acid sequence encoded.
D) missense mutation means that the change in nucleotide sequence resulting in change in amino acid sequence encoded by gene.
E) A mutation may alter the promoter of a gene, thereby affecting the rate of transcription.
The correct statements regarding single base pair mutations are: insertions or deletions within a protein coding sequence likely change the encoded amino acid sequence; missense mutations always change the encoded amino acid sequence; nucleotide substitutions outside of the coding sequence can impact gene expression.
Your question focuses on single base-pair mutations and their functional consequences. After considering the provided statements, the three correct answers are: B) Insertions or deletions of single base-pairs within a protein coding sequence probably change the amino acid sequence encoded by a gene. D) Missense mutations always change the amino acid sequence encoded by a gene. E) Nucleotide substitutions outside of the coding sequence can affect the expression of a gene.
A missense mutation is a type of mutation where a single base pair is changed, leading to the substitution of a different amino acid in the resulting protein. This change can alter the function of the protein. On the other hand, insertions or deletions of single base-pairs can often lead to a frameshift mutation, which alters the reading frame and potentially changes every subsequent amino acid in the encoded protein, often resulting in a nonfunctional protein. Lastly, nucleotide substitutions outside of the coding sequence can also affect gene expression by changing areas involved in the regulation of gene transcription.
#SPJ11
(a) Two genes, each with two alleles that show dominance
(b) Two genes, each with two alleles that act additively
(c) Three genes, each with two alleles that show dominance
(d) Three genes, each with two alleles that act additively
An F2 piglet with an 18 cm tail is heterozygous at each of the tail-length loci, and is mated to an F2 piglet with a 6 cm tail. Write down the predicted offspring genotypes and calculate the predicted tail lengths. What is the expected frequency of piglets with a 14 cm tail length?
Answer:
The answer is (d) Three genes, each with two alleles that act additively.
Explanation:
1/ The genotype of P is AABBCC and aabbcc, for example. Then, F1 should be AaBbCc.
The genotype of individuals with n heterozygous pair is 2^n. Thus, in this case, the number of genotype in F2 should be 2^3 * 2^3 = 8 * 8 = 64. We can get this conclusion by analyzing the number of 6 cm tails in F2: 1/64 with genotype aabbcc, and the number of 30 cm tails: 1/64 with genotype AABBCC. These two genotypes is as same as the ancestor in this experiment.
The genotype of an F2 piglet with an 18 cm tail is AaBbCc. If these genes show dominance, the tail lenght of F2 will be 30 cm. And there are 7 possible phenotypes. Thus, we can conclude that the genes act additively.
2/ 18 cm tail F2: AaBbCc, and 6 cm tail: aabbcc.
The offspring genotypes are:
The frequency of piglets with 14 cm tail length should be 3/8 = 37.5%.
Answer and Explanation:
1) These results are consistent with option (d)Three genes, each with two alleles that act additively .
Quantitative heritability: Refers to the transmission of a phenotypic trait in which expression depends on the additive effect of a series of genes.
Polygenic heritability occurs when a trait is due to the action of more than one gene that can also have more than two alleles. This can cause many different combinations that are the reason for genotypic graduation.
Quantitative traits are those that can be measure, such as longitude, weight, eggs laid per female, among others. These characters do not group individuals by precise and clear categories. Instead, they group individuals in many different categories that depend on how the genes were intercrossed and distributed during meiosis. The result depends on how each allele of each gene contributed to the final phenotype and genotype.
In the exposed example, there are 7 different phenotypes (6, 10, 14, 18, 22, 26, 30) and the majority of F2 individuals have 18-lengthed tails. This might be the heterozygotic phenotype for all the genes.The rest of the phenotypes are possible combinations of genes and their alleles. There are six possible combinations (apart from the 18 lenght form). This leads to 3 genes and two alleles in each gene.
So, until now we have:
Parental) 6cm x 30cm
F1) 18 cm
Parental) 18 cm x 18 cm
F2) 6, 10, 14, 18, 22, 26, 30
Gene 1: allele A and a
Gene 2: allele B and b
Gene 3: Allele C and c
Phenotypes:
aabbcc: homozygotic recessive form
AABBCC: homozygotic dominant form
AaBbCc: heterozygotic form for every intervening gene
If the recessive form is 6cm length, and each dominant allele contributes in 4 cm to each phenotype, we get:
2) An F2 piglet with an 18 cm tail is heterozygous at each of the tail-length loci, and is mated to an F2 piglet with a 6 cm tail.
Parental) AaBbCc x aabbcc
Gametes) ABC ABc AbC Abc aBC aBc abC abc
abc abc abc abc abc abc abc abc
Punnet square)
ABC ABc AbC Abc aBC aBc abC abc
abc AaBbCc AaBbcc AabbCc Aabbcc aaBbCc aaBbcc aabbCc aabbcc
abc AaBbCc AaBbcc AabbCc Aabbcc aaBbCc aaBbcc aabbCc aabbcc
abc AaBbCc AaBbcc AabbCc Aabbcc aaBbCc aaBbcc aabbCc aabbcc
abc AaBbCc AaBbcc AabbCc Aabbcc aaBbCc aaBbcc aabbCc aabbcc
abc AaBbCc AaBbcc AabbCc Aabbcc aaBbCc aaBbcc aabbCc aabbcc
abc AaBbCc AaBbcc AabbCc Aabbcc aaBbCc aaBbcc aabbCc aabbcc
abc AaBbCc AaBbcc AabbCc Aabbcc aaBbCc aaBbcc aabbCc aabbcc
abc AaBbCc AaBbcc AabbCc Aabbcc aaBbCc aaBbcc aabbCc aabbcc
F3 genotype and phenotype)
8/64 AaBbCc = 18 cm
8/64 AaBbcc = 14cm
8/64 AabbCc = 14cm
8/64 Aabbcc = 10cm
8/64 aaBbCc = 14cm
8/64 aaBbcc = 10cm
8/64 aabbCc = 10cm
8/64 aabbcc = 6cm
Each dominant allele contributes 4cm to the recessive homozygote form for each phenotype.