1. Order the processes of the Central Dogma from first to last. 2. Order the structures of the Central Dogma from first used to last used.

Understand the Problem
This question is about the central dogma of molecular biology. The student is asked to order the processes involved in the central dogma from first to last, and then order the structures involved from when they are first used to last used.
Answer
1. Transcription, RNA Modification, Translation, Protein Modification, and Gene Expression. 2. Gene, Primary Transcript, Introns, Exons, mRNA, Ribosome, Rough ER, Amino Acids, Polypeptide, 3-D Confirmation, Functional Protein, and Phenotype.
- The order of the processes of the Central Dogma from first to last: Transcription, RNA Modification, Translation, Protein Modification, and Gene Expression.
- The order of the structures of the Central Dogma from first used to last used: Gene, Primary Transcript, Introns, Exons, mRNA, Ribosome, Rough ER, Amino Acids, Polypeptide, 3-D Confirmation, Functional Protein, and Phenotype.
Answer for screen readers
- The order of the processes of the Central Dogma from first to last: Transcription, RNA Modification, Translation, Protein Modification, and Gene Expression.
- The order of the structures of the Central Dogma from first used to last used: Gene, Primary Transcript, Introns, Exons, mRNA, Ribosome, Rough ER, Amino Acids, Polypeptide, 3-D Confirmation, Functional Protein, and Phenotype.
More Information
The central dogma is a theory describing the flow of genetic information within a biological system. It dictates the flow of information from DNA to RNA to proteins.
Tips
It is important to consider the order of the processes and structures involved in the central dogma to understand how genetic information flows within a cell.
Sources
- Central Dogma of Protein Synthesis | Diagram & Processes - Lesson - study.com
- Intro to gene expression (central dogma) (article) - Khan Academy - khanacademy.org
- Steps Involved in Central Dogma - BYJU'S - byjus.com
AI-generated content may contain errors. Please verify critical information