3 Lemons is used as acidic aside to resolve stomach fat
add a tea spoon of baking soda to cleanse you system
add milk for strength and also it reacts to lemon and
baking soda making it a dense drink
so make it more potential add pine apple
A set of instructions for making a particular protein is called a gene. Genes are made up of DNA sequences that encode the specific sequence of amino acids that make up a protein. These instructions are transcribed from DNA to mRNA and then translated into a protein by ribosomes.
RNA is made in the nucleus to bring instructions out to the ribosomes so a protein can be made.
Genes are found in the nucleus , but proteins are made on ribosomes in the cytoplasm.
The instructions for a particular protein are contained on a stretch of DNA known as a gene.
DNA
The instructions for the production of proteins are found in DNA. In Eukaryotic organisms, such as humans, the DNA is located within the nucleus. A copy of this DNA is made into mRNA - which carries the instructions from the nucleus to the ribosomes, where protein synthesis occurs.
Ribosome
This set of instructions is called a gene.
Proteins are made in every living cell, in every living organism. Living cells and living organisms are made of older cells/organisms.
DNA
mRNA is used in protein synthesis because it carries the genetic information from DNA to the ribosomes, where proteins are made. This allows the ribosomes to read the instructions and assemble the correct sequence of amino acids to create the specific protein encoded by the mRNA.
The instructions for making proteins are all packaged within regions in our DNA (in the nucleus). When it's time to make a protein, enzymes read these instructions and make a little copy of the specific code for this specific protein, which then exits the nucleus where 'ribosomes' read these instructions and begin manufacturing the protein. Therefore, the entire set of original instructions are found in the nucleus (in DNA); but it is important to remember that there are lots of little copied segments in the cytoplasm that code for just one protein each.