The last type of symmetry is the bilateral symmetry. Bilateral symmetry is when the body plan can be divided along a plane that splits the animal's body into right and left sides that are mirror images of each other. Let's look at this type of symmetry a little more.
Well I not a computer Genius but no well yes
Answer:
The exchange of heat when heat is transferred to a fluid, such as air or water.
Answer:
All of the other answer choices suggest the presence of a multipass transmembrane protein.
Explanation:
The primary sequence contains stretches of polar and nonpolar amino acids, suggesting an amphipathic design.
This one could be, because of the presence of polar an nonpolar aminoacids. The phospholipids membrane have the same construction.
The protein has windows of the primary sequence with positive hydropathy values separated by windows of the primary sequence with negative hydropathy values.
The same here, having pieces of positive and negative hidropathy can be a sign of transmembrane protein.
The protein isolates with the membrane fraction of the cell rather than the cytoplasmic fraction of the cell.
This is discribing you a transmembrane protein
The answer is ovulation.
Ovulation is the process of releasing of the mature egg (Greek ovum) from the ovaries. In humans, the mature graffian follicles rupture and the secondary oocyte is released. The secondary oocyte is now ready to be fertilized by the sperm.