subject
Biology, 02.08.2019 05:50 savjk74

Suppose you treated butter with a fatty acid desaturase, an enzyme that removes hydrogen from fatty acids and creates double bonds. what would happen?

ansver
Answers: 1

Another question on Biology

question
Biology, 22.06.2019 07:00
How would you describe the the organisms in the second row of model 1 that are connected to the parents by a line
Answers: 3
question
Biology, 22.06.2019 08:10
In sweet pea, gene c is responsible for color production and gene p is responsible for the purple color pigment. both of them are located on two different loci on different chromosomes. the flowers will be purple only when the plant has the genotypes as c_p_. no color will be produced with genotypes: ccpp, ccpp, ccpp, ccpp. thus, gene c controls the expression of gene p. what pattern of inheritance is exhibited here? a. pleiotropy b. epistasis c. multiple alleles
Answers: 1
question
Biology, 22.06.2019 08:40
What best explains whether bromine (br) or neon (ne) is more likely to form a covalent bond? bromine forms covalent bonds because it has seven valence electrons, but neon has eight valence electrons and already fulfills the octet rule. bromine forms covalent bonds because it has many electron shells, but neon has only two electron shells and is tightly bound to its electrons. neon forms covalent bonds because it can share its valence electrons, but bromine has seven valence electrons and can gain only one more electron. neon forms covalent bonds because it has only two electron shells, but bromine has many electron shells and will lose electrons in order to fulfill the octet rule.
Answers: 3
question
Biology, 22.06.2019 10:00
Students commonly confuse saccharomyces cerevisiae and staphylococcus aureus when viewed on a microscope slide how could you microscopically differentiate
Answers: 1
You know the right answer?
Suppose you treated butter with a fatty acid desaturase, an enzyme that removes hydrogen from fatty...
Questions
question
Mathematics, 15.12.2021 20:30
question
Mathematics, 15.12.2021 20:30