. Human mitochondrial genomes code for 37 genes but mitochondria produce only 13 proteins. What would most likely account for mitochondrial genomes having more genes than needed to code for the proteins produced?   A. Several genes code for products that are not translated. B. Several genes have been inactivated over evolutionary time and no longer code for proteins. C. Several genes, and the proteins they code for, are of viral origin. They are not human mitochondrial genes. D. Several genes are coded on both the top and bottom strands of DNA. Therefore, they code for the same proteins

Biology: The Dynamic Science (MindTap Course List)
4th Edition
ISBN:9781305389892
Author:Peter J. Russell, Paul E. Hertz, Beverly McMillan
Publisher:Peter J. Russell, Paul E. Hertz, Beverly McMillan
Chapter19: Genomes And Proteomes
Section: Chapter Questions
Problem 17TYK
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Q5. Human mitochondrial genomes code for 37 genes but mitochondria produce only 13 proteins.

What would most likely account for mitochondrial genomes having more genes than needed to code for the proteins produced?

 

A. Several genes code for products that are not translated.

B. Several genes have been inactivated over evolutionary time and no longer code for proteins.

C. Several genes, and the proteins they code for, are of viral origin. They are not human mitochondrial genes.

D. Several genes are coded on both the top and bottom strands of DNA. Therefore, they code for the same proteins.

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