Transcription must occur .
Active transport is the process by which a cell uses energy to move molecules or ions across a cell membrane against their concentration gradient. This process requires the use of ATP energy to pump substances from an area of low concentration to an area of high concentration.
Laminin is a glycoprotein (compound where a carbohydrate is covalently linked to a protein), and like other protein molecules, it is synthesized by the DNA in the nucleus of every cell and later moved into the cytoplasm of the cell to be attached to and stored in ribosomes and the endoplasmic reticulum.
That's not easy to answer. He moved around England a lot. His parents and siblings lived in Shrewsbury, so that was sort of "home base", but he spent time in Cambridge and hither and yon visiting relatives. After marrying, he and Emma lived in London, but then moved out to the countryside. If you need details, I recommend that you search on "Charles Darwin wikipedia", and you'll find all the information you need.
Yes. But before they were located in the areas they are today. Ex: Cave fish had eyes when they were fish. Once they moved to caves they lost vision over time.
cattle ranching
Ernest Rutherford
John Dalton
The process by which most sand is moved by wind is called Deflation.
Before the Mountain Was Moved was created in 1970.
An electron produces an electron cloud when it is moved about a nucleus of an atom.
radiation
Transcription factors are typically activated by a signal transduction pathway and are then moved from the cytoplasm to the nucleus of a cell. In the nucleus, they regulate gene expression by binding to specific DNA sequences and controlling the transcription of target genes.
osmosis i believe
Chillingworth lived in England with Hester Prynne before he moved to Boston.
She lived in Arlington, Virginia, before she moved.
What was life like before Albert Einstein moved to America
The word you are looking for is "motion." It refers to the act or process of moving or being moved from one place to another.