Yes it does and circlates it
A) Active transport
Osmosis - active transport - substances move from low to high concentration
If one strand of a DNA molecule has the sequence of bases 5-ATTGCA-3, the mRNA synthesized following the template will be 3-UAACGU-5.
Nucleotides are added to the growing strand one at a time in the precise sequence dictated by the existing template strand. adenine and thymine are always paired with each other in the Watson-Crick DNA model, and cytosine is always paired with guanine.
The nucleotide sequence of DNA serves as a template for the nucleus, where mRNA is synthesised. The RNA polymerase II enzyme is responsible for this reaction's catalysis and needs nucleotide triphosphates as its substrates. Transcription is what happens in the nucleus when DNA is converted into mRNA. The cytoplasmic synthesis of proteins is controlled by the mRNA. The cytoplasm is where the mRNA that is produced in the nucleus attaches to the ribosomes after being transported from the nucleus. The nucleotide sequence of the mRNA serves as a guide for the assembly of proteins on ribosomes. The cytoplasm receives a "message" from the nucleus via mRNA. The nucleotide sequence of the mRNA, which is complementary to the nucleotide sequence of the messenger RNA, encodes the message.
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Water <span>can cross the membrane in osmosis ....
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Answer:
Yes, because each daughter cell contains replicated genetic material, which are exact copy of one another.
Explanation:
Mitosis is a kind of cell division that results in two daughter cells that are genetically identical to the parent cell. Prior to the mitotic process, the cell undergoes DNA replication in the Interphase stage. DNA replication produces a replicated copy of the genetic material (DNA) to form two copies of each chromosome in the nucleus.
This replication gives rise to two copies of the DNA borne on replicated chromosomes called SISTER CHROMATIDS. During Anaphase stage of Mitosis, the sister chromatids separate into opposite poles and eventually into two cells after CYTOKINESIS (cytoplasmic division).
Each daughter cell now contains a nuclei that contains exact copies of genetic material without any form of recombination. Hence, each daughter cell is said to be genetically identical to the parent cell.