Answer:
False
Disease in the circulatory would affect other organ system
Answer:
c. It is a systemic inflammatory disease.
Explanation:
One of the main characteristics of rheumatoid arthritis is that is a systemic inflammatory disease. This disease can affect the entire body and is not just localized to the individual's joints. In many cases the disease has been known to attack an individual's skin, eyes, lings, heart and even the blood vessels within the individual's system.
Lynn Margulis and Karlene Schwartz, in their book The Five Kingdoms (W.H. Freeman, 1998), struggled heroically to justify the Protista (they preferred the term Protoctista) kingdom. "Undulipodia (aka flagella) were present in common ancestors to all the phyla, even before mitochondria, given that the anaerobic archaeprotists bear them." However, a sentence later they admit that "in some phyla, all members bear undulipodia, in other phyla, they are absent..." It seems a shaky foundation on which to build a kingdom. All human cells are fathered ultimately by sperm, which bear undulipodia, but no one has suggested that humans are therefore protists.
Internal regulators allow the cell cycle to proceed only when certain processes have happened inside the cell. ... Cancer cells do not respond to the signals that regulate the growth of most cells. As a result, they divide uncontrollably and form masses of cells called tumors that can damage the surrounding tissues.
Answer:
Glucose enters the mitochondria for production of ATP.
Explanation:
Photosynthesis is the process through which solar energy is used to make glucose.
To generate chemical energy for cellular processes, glucose is broken down through cellular respiration in the mitochondria. This generates large amounts of ATP, which acts a source of energy to power reactions in the cell.
Excess glucose is stored as starch in plant cells