The concentration of a liquid refers to how diluted or saturated the liquid is. This orange juice is so diluted it tastes like water.
Answer:
1. What genes control the growth of cell growth?
2. What is the purpose of this regulation?
3. What happened when the cell growth is not regulated?
Explanation:
What genes control the growth of cell growth? What is the purpose of this regulation? What happened when the cell growth is not regulated?
Above are the questions which an observe would ask about regulation of cell growth. A number of genes such as oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes are involved in the regulation of cell growth and cell division. Regulation of cell growth process ensures that a cell's DNA which is dividing is copied properly as well as repair errors in the DNA. It also ensures that each daughter cell receives a complete set of chromosomes in order to gain healthy daughter cells.
Answer:
Vegetation structure that is dominanted by grasses
Answer:
C
Explanation:
When plant cells take in water, the vacuole swells. A swollen vacuole indicates the plant cell has all the water it needs. This suggests that the plant is taking in water and is maintaining optimum conditions. This is an example of homeostasis.
If the cells burst apart, as in A and E, this would suggest the cell is not properly maintaining homeostasis, as the cell bursting suggests something has gone badly wrong. This suggests the cell has taken in too much water; the cell has not been able to maintain homeostasis and regulate water uptake to prevent this from happening.
In the reverse case, where the cells shrink apart (as in B), the cell would also not be properly maintaining homeostasis by failing to bring enough water into the cell to maintain a turgid state. This is also damaging for the cells.
Finally, D and E can also not be correct, because water can cross the cell membrane, and does not need to be pumped in or sent out by endocytosis.
Answer;
cells are very different but have similar properties
Explanation;
-Even though there are many different types of cells, they all share similar characteristics. All cells have a cell membrane, organelles organelles, cytoplasm, and DNA. All cells are surrounded by a cell membrane, all cells contain organelles, all cells contain cytoplasm and all cells contain DNA.
-Cells may differ in their number such that some organisms are made of only a single cell while other organisms are made of billions of cells