• Q : What phenotypes will be seen in the f2....
    Biology :

    what phenotypes will be seen in the f2 and in what proportion and the A locus and the D locus are so tightly linked that no recombination is ever observed between them.if A d/A d is crossed

  • Q : Identify each period in the pattern of disease....
    Biology :

    He continued taking antibiotics for 14 days. Identify each period in the pattern of disease that he experienced. Note: The disease is psittacosis. Can you find the etiology?

  • Q : When allosteric effector x binds to enzyme....
    Biology :

    When allosteric effector X binds to enzyme #1, the enzyme stops working.

  • Q : Explain the difference and why tig is so important....
    Biology :

    In Rh disease of the newborn, maternal antibodies enter fetal circulation and destroy the red blood cells of the fetus. A mother with type O blood has anti-A and anti-B antibodies, but may have a do

  • Q : Analysis of the facts and a coherent explanation....
    Biology :

    Compose a one-half page document that addresses the question associated with the scenario below. Your writing should present a clear analysis of the facts and a coherent explanation and/or solution

  • Q : Nutrition and exercise plan....
    Biology :

    He normally has a piece of fruit with breakfast and some form of potato during the day. Mitch's mother lived until she was 92 and her death was attributed to old age. His dad died at 71 and had a hi

  • Q : What is the probable source of infection in hospitals....
    Biology :

    Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare is prevalent in AIDS patients. In an effort to determine the source of this infection, hospital water systems were sampled. The water contained chlorine. What is t

  • Q : How is mpf involved in one or more of the checkpoints....
    Biology :

    Checkpoints in the cell cycle are specific times at which certain requirements must be fulfilled for the cell to continue through the cycle. Where in the cell cycle are the checkpoints found? How do

  • Q : Magnitude of nutrients stored in microorganisms....
    Biology :

    Write a three to five page paper in which you summarize and reflect on this very important article that was one of the first to point out the magnitude of nutrients stored in microorganisms.

  • Q : Effects and suggest a a way to mitigate the impact....
    Biology :

    Give an example of how humans negatively affect each of the three main nutrient cycles. Choose one of of these effects and suggest a a way to mitigate the impact.

  • Q : Find fossils of fish and seed-bearing plants....
    Biology :

    You are the managing naturalist for a natural history museum that has just received a batch of fossils from one of the field paleontologists sponsored by the museum.

  • Q : Structural biology....
    Biology :

    Recent technological advances have made it more feasible than ever to work out the three-dimensional structure of proteins.

  • Q : Functions in a negative feedback system....
    Biology :

    Mechanically-gated channels located in the plasma membranes of the peripheral axon terminals of carotid artery baroreceptor neurons.

  • Q : Types of microbe-produced fuels....
    Biology :

    Need a summary of different types of microbe-produced fuels currently available. Need persuasive argument to support further funding for research and development of a microbe produced fuel

  • Q : Positive diagnosis of aids....
    Biology :

    Positive diagnosis of AIDS is made when a patient has antibodies against the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Please explain why the patient has an immune deficiency if he or she is making antibo

  • Q : Diagram of an inducible operon....
    Biology :

    Enzymes A and B are both required for the breakdown of the sugar sweetose. The wild-type operon is regulated by the protein (X), which is continuously produced.

  • Q : How to do a chi square problem for my gentics class....
    Biology :

    To test his proposal, Dr. Dopsis examines the F2 data under the assumptions of the single-gene incomplete dominance model using chi-square analysis.

  • Q : What is the molarity of salt in physiological saline....
    Biology :

    How much 4X sample buffer do you need to add to 10 ul of DNA in order to run it out on an agarose gel and what is the molarity of salt in physiological saline?

  • Q : What fraction of demes in each set....
    Biology :

    For a diploid species, assume one set of 100 demes, each with a constant size of 50 individuals, and another set of 100 demes, each with 100 individuals.

  • Q : Differences in head movement available to fish....
    Biology :

    Describe the differences in head movement available to fish, amphibians, reptiles/birds, and mammmals.

  • Q : Give the sex chromosome constitution....
    Biology :

    Give the sex chromosome constitution (X and Y chromosome)and possible genotypes of offspring resulting from a cross between a white-eye female

  • Q : What would be the expected phenotypes....
    Biology :

    what would be the expected phenotypes, and in what number would the y be expected? assume no linkage.

  • Q : How many of each phenotype would you expect....
    Biology :

    what phenotypes would you expect among the 1024 offspring, and how many of each phenotype would you expect?

  • Q : What do you meant by daughter cells....
    Biology :

    Sketch the way new cell wall forms between two daughter cells when a plant cell divides. In particular, show where the membrane proteins of the Golgi-derived vesicles end up,

  • Q : Deleterious mutations....
    Biology :

    Genetically uniform, except for rare deleterious mutations. We now know that most populations are genetically very variable. Contrast the implications of these different views for evolutionary proce

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