Answer:
down syndrome
Explanation:
people with down syndrome have an extra chromosome in the twenty-first pair
The answer is anticodon.
Anticodons are base triplets on transfer RNA (tRNA). t<span>RNA carries amino acids to the ribosome for protein synthesis. </span>The prefix<em> anti-</em> suggests that anticodons are complementary to the codons on mRNA. Codons are base triplets on mRNA. So, anticodons of tRNA pair with codons of mRNA in the process of protein synthesis.
<span>Prokaryotes is the answer</span>
Yes and no. Everyone's heart works the same way, is made of the same type of tissue and is located in the same part of the body. However, there are people with diseases who have hearts that are in worse condition and may look different. For example, people with coronary artery disease experience plaque build up in their coronary arteries, which causes a reduction of blood flow to the heart, and in order to treat this they may get a bypass surgery in which another blood vessel from somewhere else in the body, would be used to bypass the blocked blood vessel. In this case the anatomy of that person's heart would be slightly different.