What does semiconservative mean? What does IR mean in meteorology? What does Laurasia mean? What is one example of a medium? What is S-shaped scoliosis? Define isostatic stretching. What does it mean to blow out your knee? What does it mean to have negative charge?
In DNA replication, what does the term semiconservative mean? What happens to the DNA after transcription? Why is DNA replication necessary to life? Explain the reason that Okazaki fragments form during DNA replication. During DNA replication, which strand is the lagging strand? Why can't both ...
What is the basic structure of DNA? How does it store information? Which DNA bases pair with each other? What are the chemical components of DNA, and how do these components combine to form a DNA molecule? What is a discrete unit of hereditary information consisting of a specific nucleotide...
Summarize the structure and function of DNA. What does it mean that DNA contains information? DNA is often referred to as a ladder. What pieces of the DNA molecule make up the sides of the ladder? What is the evidence of DNA as genetic material?
What does DRSABCD stand for? What is the definition of environmental gerontology? What does it mean for a hypothesis to be falsifiable? What is CMV viremia? What does semiconservative mean? What does DE mean in animal science? What does corrosive mean? What does the "bio-" in biomechanics ...
What does it mean when I say that a single strand of DNA is considered the sense (or coding) strand? Suppose you perform PCR using only one copy of a double-stranded DNA molecule. How many copies of this double-stranded DNA molecule would be present a...
What is the semiconservative model of DNA?Which enzyme catalyzes the elongation of a DNA strand in the 5'-3' direction?Why does DNA synthesis only proceed in the 5' to 3' direction? a. Because DNA polymerases can only add nucleotides to the 3' end of a polynucleotide strand. b. ...
Explain the three factors that affect the affinity of hemoglobin to oxygen. Explain the semiconservative model. (a) What are the different blood types? (b) What makes them different? 1. What is UNEP and what does it do? 2. Name one example of each factor. ...
What is the key feature of DNA that allows it to be copied? a) the arrangement of chromosomes b) Okazaki fragments c) complementary base pairing d) the sugar-phosphate backbone What is DNA replication? What nitrogen base is on DNA, but not on RNA? What does DNA primase do? The backbone...
What does it do? Which DNA bases pair with each other? Name five processes whereby the DNA within chromosomes can be changed. What is DNA composed of listing their scientific names? What are the two purines in DNA? Name the four (4) nucleotides. What is DNA replication? What aspects of...