All the information necessary for an organism to form and grow is
recorded in the organism's DNA. How does DNA use its stored information
to express a trait? *
O
a. The genes in the DNA instruct the cell to make proteins.
O
b. Codons in the DNA stimulate the DNA to replicate.
O
c. Every time the DNA replicates, new traits are expressed.
d. The nucleotides in the DNA bind with amino acids in order to direct the cell's
functions

Respuesta :

Explanation:

a. The genes in the DNA instruct the cell to make proteins.

Genes are a set of coded instructions in the form of DNA, which are crucial to cell regulation - these enable protein synthesis.

Further Explanation:

Nucleic acids are comprised of smaller units called nucleotides and function as storage for the body’s genetic information. These monomers include ribonucleic acid (RNA) or deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). They differ from other macromolecules since they don’t provide the body with energy. They exist solely to encode and carry out protein synthesis.

All the genetic information within the eukaryotic cell is stored within the nucleus as helical DNA. This DNA is condensed and tightly wound around histones as chromosomes. Chromosomes within the nucleus is unwound, unzipped and read by enzymes in a complex series of steps known as transcription. The message on DNA, called genes is copied by RNA polymerase, to form mRNA complementary sequence to that of the DNA strand. These are then translated into proteins in ribosomes.

Learn more about transcription at brainly.com/question/11339456

Learn more about DNA and RNA at brainly.com/question/2416343?source=aid8411316

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