Answer:
The fork is drawn to emphasize its similarity to the bacterial replication fork depicted in Figure. Although both forks use the same basic components, the mammalian fork differs in at least two important respects.
First, it uses two different DNA polymerases on the lagging strand.
Second, the mammalian DNA primase is a subunit of one of the lagging-strand DNA polymerases, DNA polymerase α, while that of bacteria is associated with a DNA helicase in the primosome. The polymerase α (with its associated primase) begins chains with RNA, extends them with DNA, and then hands the chains over to the second polymerase (δ), which elongates them. It is not known why eucaryotic DNA replication requires two different polymerases on the lagging strand. The major mammalian DNA helicase seems to be based on a ring formed from six different Mcm proteins; this ring may move along the leading strand, rather than along the lagging-strand template shown here.
Reference: Molecular Biology of the Cell. 4th edition. Alberts B, Johnson A, Lewis J, et al. New York: Garland Science; 2002.
The answer are Dyspnea and wheezing. It is lungs air sacks
become inflamed, a common lung infection called pneumonia. The causes of this pneumonia
is viruses, fungi or bacteria. The air sacs is also filled with fluid, pus and
cellular debris. There are many ways why a child or a person catches bacterial
pneumonia, one of those is the spread via air-borne droplets from a cough or
sneeze.
I think the best answer would be A. since the number of prairie dogs decreased from the picture on the left to the picture on the right. Hope this helped :p
Answer:
Explanation:
when youre feelinsgs subside and shadows still remain
gons and ruse