Sovi.AI - AI Math Tutor

Scan to solve math questions

QUESTION IMAGE

look again at the partial gene sequences and their translations. sequen…

Question

look again at the partial gene sequences and their translations.
sequence 1:
caacccagtga
part of a gene
sequence
translated amino
acid sequence
valine
serine
proline

sequence 2:
caactcagaga
part of a gene
sequence
translated amino
acid sequence
glutamine
leucine
serine
arginine

how many of the amino acids in sequence 2 are different from the amino acids in sequence 1?

why are the translations of sequence 1 and sequence 2 different? select all that apply.
sequence 1 and sequence 2 have different numbers of codons.
sequence 1 and sequence 2 have different nucleotide sequences.
sequence 1 and sequence 2 have different numbers of nucleotides.

Explanation:

Response
First Sub - Question (How many amino acids differ?)

Step 1: List amino acids of each sequence

Sequence 1 (CAACCCAGTTA) translated amino acids: Glutamine, Proline, Serine, Valine.
Sequence 2 (CAACTCAGTGA) translated amino acids: Glutamine, Leucine, Serine, Arginine.

Step 2: Compare each position

  • Position 1: Both Glutamine (same).
  • Position 2: Proline vs Leucine (different).
  • Position 3: Serine (same).
  • Position 4: Valine vs Arginine (different).
  • Count the different ones: 2.
Brief Explanations
  • Analyze each option:
  • "Sequence 1 and sequence 2 have different numbers of codons": Both sequences have 4 codons (since each amino acid is coded by a codon, 4 amino acids each, so 4 codons), so this is wrong.
  • "Sequence 1 and sequence 2 have different nucleotide sequences": The gene sequences (nucleotide sequences) are different (CAACCCAGTTA vs CAACTCAGTGA), which changes the codons and thus the amino acids translated, so this is correct.
  • "Sequence 1 and sequence 2 have different numbers of nucleotides": Both sequences have 12 nucleotides (4 codons × 3 nucleotides per codon), so this is wrong.

Answer:

2

Second Sub - Question (Why are translations different?)