The five proteins of the myofilaments are the following:
<span>1.
</span>Myosin, shaped like a golf club, with two
polypeptides intertwined to form a shaftlike tail and a double globular head,
or cross-bridge, projecting from it at an angle.
<span>2. </span>Fibrous actin is like a bead necklace—a string
of subunits called globular (G) actin. Each G actin has an active site that can
bind to the head of a myosin molecule.
<span>3. </span>Tropomyosin. It blocks the active sites of six
or seven G actins and prevents myosin cross-bridges from binding to them when a
muscle fiber is relaxed.
<span>4. </span>Troponin a smaller calcium-binding protein bound
to each tropomyosin molecule.
<span>5. </span>Titin (connectin), run through the core of a
thick filament, emerge from the end of it, and connect it to a structure called
the Z disc.
In both instances you are doing an action over an over again.
Viruses are similar because they move around freely.
Answer:
A) purine
Explanation:
There are two ways for the synthesis of purines and pyrimidines:
- de novo synthesis-from basic simple units
- "recycling" synthesis-reuse of metabolites
Purines are synthesized directly on ribose sugar, in segments.
Pyrimidines are attached to the ribose after the synthesis of the base.
5-Phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate (PRPP). is used for the synthesis of purine (ribose 5-phosphate reacts with ATP to form ribonucleotide).
Answer: the white
Explanation: the white allele for flower color is recessive to the red flower-color allele. And, if it has a red allele and a white allele, its flowers will be red or pink rather than white.