Answer:
- Physical and chemical barriers
- non-specific innate responses
- specific adaptive responses
<u>The differences are...</u>
The first barrier is the physical and chemical barrier. It is the first line of defense when in contact with outside sources, this can be through the skin, earwax, nose-hair, etc.
The second barrier, the non-specific innate response, is after these outside sources have somehow managed to pass through the first barrier. They come into contact with cells and enzymes that help to defeat them.
The third barrier, the specific adaptive response, is the body's way of dealing with pathogens that the body has encountered before. (B cells activate)
Answer:
The chromosomes inroduces carbon factors
Explanation:
Answer:
The way that the Universe works, the way that different things in life contribute to one another.
Explanation:
Dang, that got deep real quick
The correct answer is: a. A site in DNA that recruits the RNA Polymerase
Promoters are regions of DNA molecule located near the transcription start codons of genes, usually upstream on the DNA with the function to initiate DNA transcription. Promoters contain specific DNA sequences (e.g. TATA boxes) that are binding sites for the enzyme RNA polymerase and transcription factors that recruit RNA polymerase. Transcription factors can regulate gene expression and act as activators or repressors depending on sequences that attach to specific promoters.
Answer:
Well for any animal thriving and overpopulating it can cause lack of food, damaged ecosystems, and disease.
Specifically the cane toad thriving and overpopulating can cause death from their toxins and sense they are one of the biggest toads, they can effect bigger animals and even humans, lowering the population of another species and damaging an ecosystem.
Explanation:
Hope this helped