Answer:
B False
Explanation:
Answer: False
It is not true
Answer:
Organism cloning. Organism cloning (also called reproductive cloning) refers to the procedure of creating a new multicellular organism, genetically identical to another. In essence this form of cloning is an asexual method of reproduction, where fertilization or inter-gamete contact does not take place.
O in the chemical bond holding the sugar to the nitrogen base
in the chemical bonds holding the sugar molecule together
O In the chemical bonds holding the phosphate groups together
Energy in ATP is stored in the chemical bonds connecting the phosphate groups. The release of energy occurs when these bonds are broken, specifically between the second and third phosphate groups.
Energy in ATP (Adenosine Triphosphate) is stored in the chemical bonds holding the phosphate groups together. This molecule consists of a nucleoside (adenosine) attached to three phosphate groups. When ATP is broken down into ADP (Adenosine Diphosphate) and inorganic phosphate, a considerable amount of energy is released. This energy release happens due to the breaking of a high-energy bond between the second and third phosphate groups, which are negatively charged and thus naturally repel each other.
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Answer:
a. Sucrose is present in the plant cells that provide them energy and helps in the metabolic process of the plants. The pH of the plant cells will increase and their cellular environment becomes basic in nature. The uptake of sucrose is pH specific and the acidic condition in the environment allows the uptake of sucrose. The decrease in pH concentration in the environment increases the pH inside the cells.
b. The inhibitor of ATP inhibits the production and functioning of the ATP molecule. This effects the sucrose transport in the plant cells. As the sucrose movement requires the ATP and it is a active transport. The ATP inhibition decreases the sucrose uptake in the plant cells and the sucrose concentration decreases inside the plant cells.
Sucrose uptake in plant cells seems to require an acidic environment, brought about by the active transport of protons which requires ATP. An inhibitor of ATP regeneration would likely slow or stop this transport and, in turn, sucrose absorption.
The reported results suggest that the process of sucrose uptake in plant cells involves acidification of the surrounding medium prior to sucrose absorption. This can be explained by the proton-sucrose symport mechanism, in which protons (H+ ions) are actively pumped out of the cell in a process that requires ATP energy. When these protons combine with water (H2O) in the cell's environment, they form hydronium ions (H3O+), resulting in a lower pH or more acidic environment. Only after this acidic environment is established does sucrose uptake begin.
Based on this mechanism, introducing an inhibitor of ATP regeneration would be expected to decrease or halt this process, since ATP is required for the active transportation of protons. With less ATP, fewer protons will be pumped out, leading to a less acidic environment and, thus, lower sucrose uptake. This hypothesis is supported by how phosphofructokinase, a key enzyme in glycolysis (ATP production), is affected by low pH levels.
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b. dendrite
c. sensory
d. motor
Answer: d. motor
Explanation: Efferent neurons are motor neurons. They are called efferent neurons because they transport nerve impulses out of the central nervous system (CNS) to effectors such as muscles or glands.
Answer:
Explanation:
Step 1: Generating a Proton Motive Force
The hydrogen carriers (NADH and FADH2) are oxidised and release high energy electrons and protons
The electrons are transferred to the electron transport chain, which consists of several transmembrane carrier proteins
As electrons pass through the chain, they lose energy – which is used by the chain to pump protons (H+ ions) from the matrix
The accumulation of H+ ions within the intermembrane space creates an electrochemical gradient (or a proton motive force)
Step Two: ATP Synthesis via Chemiosmosis
The proton motive force will cause H+ ions to move down their electrochemical gradient and diffuse back into matrix
This diffusion of protons is called chemiosmosis and is facilitated by the transmembrane enzyme ATP synthase
As the H+ ions move through ATP synthase they trigger the molecular rotation of the enzyme, synthesising ATP
Step Three: Reduction of Oxygen
In order for the electron transport chain to continue functioning, the de-energised electrons must be removed
Oxygen acts as the final electron acceptor, removing the de-energised electrons to prevent the chain from becoming blocked
Oxygen also binds with free protons in the matrix to form water – removing matrix protons maintains the hydrogen gradient
In the absence of oxygen, hydrogen carriers cannot transfer energised electrons to the chain and ATP production is halted