False. Mostly. The genotype refers to a gene which has one or more alleles. Alleles cause variation such as differences in hair colour, eye colour, height and most things. In terms of general human functions, enzyme types are pretty standard, and the number of enzymes is controlled by the pancreas/other enzyme-making organs. But if someone had a deficiency (ie Diabetes), that can have genetic factors which inhibit enzyme activity. So in general no, except for when the genotype causes a disease.
Yes, DNA is transcribed into RNA and that RNA is used as a blueprint for proteins
No
It is TRUE
The instructions for making proteins are specified by genes
FALSE
true
Yes
No genes are traits passed to offspring
False
A gene
Amino Acids
no kind of protein is a gene. Proteins (including glycoproteins) are encoded by genes. genes are a blueprint for creating proteins.
The regulator gene produces repressor protein.
No, that is false. according to prentice hall biology book chapter 12 section 5
gene
A gene is the string of triplets that specifies a particular protein.
well the gene code itself, each codon (and anti-codon) codes for different proteins
False. During meiosis, the two alleles for each gene can separate and be distributed to different gametes. This is known as Mendel's law of independent assortment, which allows for new combinations of alleles to be formed in offspring.
Each cell produces only the proteins it needs.
Genes code for proteins, but they do not produce proteins.
Genes, which are made up of DNA, act as instructions to make molecules called proteins.
False: its An Repressor not an enhancer
ribosomes
A gene
There is a specific gene in the chromosomes that codes for each protein. These genes and the proteins they code for evolved to perform those functions needed by the cell.
Amino Acids