The correct answer is macrophage.
<span>The macrophage is a type of white blood cells with phagocyte activity which means its main function is to “eat” foreign particles such as bacteria. A macrophage has the ability to locate those particles (viruses, parasites, fungi, bacteria) and do the cleanup.</span>
Answer:
Twins, says Dr. Judith G. ... Fraternal twins are known to arise when two eggs are released from the ovaries, get fertilized and implant together in the womb. In contrast, identical twins start out as a single embryo, split, and then develop as separate individuals in the womb.
DNA
1. Found in nucleus
2. Sugar is deoxyribose
3. Bases are A, T, C, and G
RNA
1. Found in nucleus and cytoplasm
2. Sugar is ribose
3. Bases are A, U, C, and G
Answer:
a) the oxidizing agent.
Explanation:
In the citric acid cycle, malate is dehydrogenated into oxaloacetate and the reaction is catalyzed by malate dehydrogenase. The released electrons are accepted by NAD+. So, NAD+ is reduced into NADH. The substances that accept electrons during chemical reactions and are reduced to oxidize the other substances are called oxidizing agents. NAD+ serves as an oxidizing agent as it accepts electrons to oxidize malate into oxaloacetate.
The best answer is D.
Hormones are chemical messengers secreted mostly into blood and also extracellular fluid by specialized tissue of the endocrine system and affect the functioning of other tissues or cells.
Most hormones circulate in blood and come in contact with essentially all cells, but a particular hormone will only affect a limited number of cells, which are termed as target cells to that hormone.
A target cell responds to a particular hormone because it bears receptors for that hormone.
For example the red blood cells have receptors for the hormone called insulin which is produced by the pancreas. The red cells are able to take in glucose when their receptors bind to insulin.