Answer:
C. THE CONVERSION OF FRUCTOSE 1,6-BISPHOSPHATE to fructose- 6- phosphate is not catalyzed by phosphofructokinase -1, the enzyme involved in glycolysis.
Explanation:
This statement is true as the enzyme involved in this step is FRUCTOSE-1,6-BISPHOSPHATASE.
Gluconeogenesis is the coversion of non-carbohydrate molecules (lactic acid, amino acids, glycerol) through the pyruvic acid into glucose in the cells.
This process takes place mainly in the liver and occurs during periods of fasting, starvation, low carbohydrate diets.
The pathway of gluconeogenesis involves eleven steps of enzymatic catalyzed reactions.
In the conversion of fructose 1,6- bisphosphate to fructose-6-phosphate is catalyzed by fructose 1,6-bisphosphatase and not by phosphofructokinase -1 which is involved in glycolysis. This step is a rate-limiting step of the pathway.
The conversion of glucose-6-phospahte to glucose is not catalyzes by hexokinase but glucose -6- phosphatase.
It will be 0%.
Let's say the dads genotype is BB and the mothers is bb. When put into the punnet square, it is all Bb. None of their kids will have the same exact genotype. Also, it is heterozygous. None of the parents are heterozygous.
Answer:
Embryotic stem cell research benefits our society with the possibility of it helping various diseases and it only requires a small number of cells. The negatives of stem cell research are the cost and ethical controversary. To start, stem cell research could help with diseases like Alzheimer's and certain cancers like Parkinson's. Also since cells replicate incredibly fast, procedures wouldn't need many cells depending on the case. Stem cell research can vary in costs from about $5000 to $20,000 which for many people is difficult because stem cells are very temporary in many cases. Many groups of people don't agree with stem cell research since human embryos are destroyed in the process of harvesting embryonic cells and it is "potential life".
Thats all i could do i hope this helps
Answer:
B
Explanation:
because Transpiration is an important part of the water cycle.
Natural Disasters such as Volcanoes, Tsunamis and Earthquakes.