No. It is a distinct region of a DNA molecule.
a region of the DNA molecule that stores instructions for a protein is called a
The promoter is a nontranscribed region of a gene.
That is called a gene.
The region of chromosome that is generally thought of as the unit of function is the "gene". Genes are composed of both a "coding region"--that sequence that tells the cell's machinery what the protein will be--and a "regulatory" region, which tells the cell when to turn on the coding region to make the protein.
The mRNA molecule encodes the protein product in the cell for translation. It is a double stranded, base-paired, ribonucleic acid that typically encodes a single gene, or protein, product.
a region of the DNA molecule that stores instructions for a protein is called a
The promoter is a nontranscribed region of a gene.
That is called a gene.
YES
The promoter is a nontranscribed region of a gene.
Genes code for proteins.
By attaching to the a region of the gene called operator thus blocking RNA polymerase so that the gene is not transcribed.
DNA > Gene > Amino Acids > Protein > Specialized Cell > Trait
Gene expression is the process by which the information encoded in a gene is used to direct the assembly of a protein molecule. The cell reads the sequence of the gene in groups of three bases. Each group of three bases (codon) corresponds to one of 20 different amino acids used to build the protein.
The coding region of a gene is that portion of a gene's DNA or RNA, composed of exons, that codes for protein. The coding region of an organism is the sum total of the organism's genome.
The region of chromosome that is generally thought of as the unit of function is the "gene". Genes are composed of both a "coding region"--that sequence that tells the cell's machinery what the protein will be--and a "regulatory" region, which tells the cell when to turn on the coding region to make the protein.
The mRNA molecule encodes the protein product in the cell for translation. It is a double stranded, base-paired, ribonucleic acid that typically encodes a single gene, or protein, product.