Human Anatomy & Physiology (11th Edition)
11th Edition
ISBN: 9780134580999
Author: Elaine N. Marieb, Katja N. Hoehn
Publisher: PEARSON
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What do proteins, polysaccharides and nucleic acids have in common?
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- Defend or refute the following statement: The uppertemperature limit to life is unrelated to the stability ofproteins or nucleic acidsarrow_forwardUsing good details, show how the function of two or three different nucleic acids is connected to their structure (choose among the nucleotides, dinucleotides, and chains of nucleic acids that you learned about). be meaningful; • be well-organized and easy-to-follow; • show your understanding of the vocabulary. Your concept map should include these concepts and details: ● Structure (functional groups, shape); Monomer; ● Linkage; Properties; • Functions; • And the table below nucleotide phosphodiester bond nitrogenous base ribose deoxyribose ATP NAD+ NADP+ FAD CAMP potential energy double helix autotroph heterotroph food systemarrow_forwardWhat is the primary structure of a protein? Describe how the primary structure of proteins is used by evolutionary biologistsarrow_forward
- Complete concept maparrow_forwardHello, could write me a paragraph on the importance of bonds and bonding in organisms. You could link any of these topics: • 3.1.1 Monomers and polymers • 3.1.2 Carbohydrates • 3.1.3 Lipids • 3.1.4.1 General properties of proteins • 3.1.4.2 Many proteins are enzymes • 3.1.5.1 Structure of DNA and RNA • 3.1.5.2 DNA replication • 3.1.6 ATP • 3.1.7 Water – cohesion • 3.2.2 Mitosis • 3.2.3 Transport across cell membranes • 3.2.4 Cell recognition and the immune system • 3.3.3 Digestion and absorption • 3.3.4.1 Mass transport in animals – haemoglobin • 3.3.4.2 Mass transport in plants • 3.4.2 DNA and protein synthesis • 3.4.3 Mutation and meiosis • 3.5.1 Photosynthesis • 3.5.2 Respiration • 3.5.4 Nutrient cycles • 3.6.2.2 Synaptic transmission • 3.6.3 Skeletal muscles • 3.6.4.2 Control of blood glucose concentration • 3.6.4.3 Control of blood water potential • 3.8.1 Mutations • 3.8.2.2 Regulation of transcription and translation • 3.8.2.3 Gene expression and…arrow_forwardTEd talk link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zm-3kovWpNQarrow_forward
- A famous experiment used the chemicals found in the early atmosphere of the earth and added energy from electrical sparks to show that the beaker accumulated the building blocks of life (the monomers, such as amino acids). Is it also important to show that the early earth was able to polymerize these building blocks of life into chains of monomers (polymerization with chemical bonds between monomers)? Why?arrow_forwardSarah Wilson 5 days ago What are the biologically important types of lipids? COLLAPSEarrow_forwardDNA differs from RNA is every way listed except for: O the purines present O the five-carbon sugar O the pyrimidines present O sizearrow_forward
- You discover a new molecule. The new molecule is made up entirely of carbon and hydrogen (no other elements). Based on this information how would you categorize the new molecule? a)Lipidb)Nucleic Acidc)Polypeptided)Polysaccharidearrow_forwardOrganize the words listed below. Connect the words between terms, ideas, concepts, process etc.arrow_forwardAll proteins, have quaternery structure 2 made up of amino acids 3 are enzyme made up of nucleic acids MARKED FOR REVIEWarrow_forward
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