Question: Many molecules are moved through the body by?
Answer:<u> The molecules are moved through the body by uses special transport proteins to move molecules across the membrane that cannot pass thorough on their own. Usually large molecules. Carrier proteins blind and carry the molecules across the cell membrane. They provide an open channel of passageway through the cell membrane for molecules to move across.</u>
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<span>When a plant undergoes photosynthesis, one of the by-products is oxygen or CO2.
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Answer:
C) Both Suresh and Gail could be correct.
Explanation:
The pre-messenger RNA (pre-mRNA) transcript obtained after transcription of eukaryotic genes must undergo several processing events, including a process known as intron splicing, where introns (i.e., the non-coding sections of an RNA transcript) are removed and exons (coding regions) are joined to form a mature mRNA molecule. The three prime untranslated (3′-UTR) region of this mRNA can also bind to regulatory non-coding RNAs such as, for example, miRNAs which inhibit gene expression by inhibiting translation and/or by triggering its degradation. Moreover, the 3′-UTR region may also contain silencer sequences that bind to repressors in order to inhibit gene expression. On the other hand, translation refers to the process by which an ordered polypeptide chain (i.e., a protein) is synthesized by using the information contained in an mRNA molecule. In consequence, in the case under consideration, the mutation in the second gene could affect both RNA processing and the regulation of translation, thereby equally affecting HOX3A protein synthesis.