Nano1llus10n wrote:Does anyone want to guess? If not, I'll post the answer
Maybe wait anther 24 hours and then reveal.
Meh, 1 in 3 shot,
Archaea?
y'know, in retrospect i shouldn't have guessed the least likely one...
it affects the domains Archaea (as neil guessed) and Eukarya. The toxin's gene is very unusual as it is encoded by a bacteriophage (virus) instead of the bacteria itself.
Since Neil got one of the domains correct, he should go next.
bmd234 wrote:First question I've ever asked on here
Question:
What is one virus in group VII on the Baltimore Classification of Viruses?
I don't recall any viruses on the list being group VII (HIV is group VI), but I do know the general family Hepadnaviridae is a family of group VII viruses.
WESTWINDSOR-PLAINSBOROHIGHSCHOOLSOUTH'18 EMORYUNIVERSITY'22
SONT 2017 5th Place Medalist [Microbe Mission]
"One little Sciolyer left all alone,
He went out and hanged himself and then there were none."
Congratulations to WW-P South/Grover for winning 2nd/1st place at NJ States!
bmd234 wrote:First question I've ever asked on here
Question:
What is one virus in group VII on the Baltimore Classification of Viruses?
I don't recall any viruses on the list being group VII (HIV is group VI), but I do know the general family Hepadnaviridae is a family of group VII viruses.
Actually, there is one on the list;Hepatitis B, which is in the taxonomic family of Hepadnaviridae
bmd234 wrote:First question I've ever asked on here
Question:
What is one virus in group VII on the Baltimore Classification of Viruses?
I don't recall any viruses on the list being group VII (HIV is group VI), but I do know the general family Hepadnaviridae is a family of group VII viruses.
Actually, there is one on the list;Hepatitis B, which is in the taxonomic family of Hepadnaviridae
Nano1llus10n wrote:1. Who made the Endosymbiotic Theory?
2. What does it state?
3. What are 4 pieces of evidence for this?
1. Lynn Margulis
2. The mitochondria and chloroplast were originally free-living prokaryotes that became incorporated into eukaryotes.
3. Mitochondria and chloroplasts divide through binary fission, are the same size as bacteria, have their own different, circular DNA, ribosomes and two membranes. The two membranes have different chemical compositions, with the outer being similar to the eukaryotic plasma membrane and the inner being similar to bacterial membranes.