AAG is lysine, AGG is argenine, again its lysine then AGA is argenine again.
The double strand is separated by an enzyme called helicase. A primer is placed at the 3' end of the template strand. DNA Polymerase III (another enzyme) then adds new nucleotides to the primer, in the 5'-3' direction. The primers are replaced with DNA nucleotides by DNA Polymerase I and joined together by ligase. This is how DNA is replicated.
If DNA ligase were defective, it would impede the ability to join Okazaki fragments during DNA replication. This could result in gaps in the newly synthesized DNA strand, leading to mutations and potential disruptions in vital cellular processes.
You can predict the base sequence of one strand of DNA if you know the sequence of the complementary strand because DNA strands are complementary and follow base-pairing rules (adenine pairs with thymine, and cytosine pairs with guanine). However, if the question implies difficulty in prediction, it may relate to factors such as DNA mutations, structural variations, or the presence of non-canonical base pairing that could complicate straightforward predictions. In typical scenarios, though, knowing one strand allows for the accurate determination of the other.
This would be a point mutation, which may be harmless, or could be lethal, depending on the protein in which it occurred.
Yes, but only some times some times they could be harmful
A strand of wool could be a length of yarn.
You could write it as 88.9 with the 9 repeating.
It could be, but it could also be 1.1211211211211211211222 which is terminating or it could continue in a non-repeating fashion. From the information given in the question it is not possible to tell.
If it ends in a decimal, then it must be a whole number. Repeating could be ruled out immediately because even though theoretically it could be a thought of as a repeating decimal with infinite zeros repeating, adding zeros doesn't change the quantity and you could in theory add infinite zeros to the end of ANY decimal. That does not make it repeating.
Echo
It's an oxymoron.A decimal is either terminating or repeating. It can't be both.or it could be in the third category of integors.
We ususally stop on the thousandths but 3 hits out of 10 at bats could be considered a repeating decimal.
1.7575... = 58/33 1.7555... = 79/45
Non terminating repeating decimals would be such as 0.3333333 where the 3 could continue on forever.
The Strand bamboo flooring is easy to install for the average handyman, but if you don't have any experience it could be difficult.
Try e-gunparts.com
repeating it