Does this help?
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<u><em>The glucose (sugar or plants food) is then converted back into carbon dioxide which is vital during photosynthesis. This therefore means that when stomata is blocked photosynthesis will stop because the CO₂ level will decline within the leaf, stopping the reactions that are light-independent.</em></u>
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<em>~Hope this helps~</em>
The correct answer for the question that is being presented above is this one:
(1) viruses only: capsid, envelope with glycoproteins, capsomere (core protein)
<span>(2) host cell only: ribosome
</span><span>(3) both: DNA, RNA, Protein</span>
Katie has a rare neurological disease in which her neurons can receive new information and process it, but some of them just cannot pass the information along. This disease most likely affects the axon of the neurons. Since axon is the signal transmitting end of the neuron, if the fusion of the vesicles containing the neurotransmitters with the cell membrane around the synaptic cleft is hampered, then the signal transmission gets disrupted.
Answer:
4. B cells become activated by interacting with helper T cells.
1. B cells display antigens in MHC class II receptors on the cell surface.
2. Antibodies released by plasma cells bind to the antigen so they will be destroyed by other cells of the immune system.
3.B cells rearrange their DNA to create a unique B-cell receptor.
5. B cells undergo clonal expansion.
6. B cells digest antigens that bind to the antibodies on their surface.
Explanation:
B-cells get activated by interacting with helper T cells when they bind to the antigen to receptors i.e (MHC class II receptors on the cell surface) on the surface of the cell. Series of activities such as release by plasma cells which cause rearrangement of B cells causes the cell to divide and proliferate. The process through which daughter cells arise from a parent cell called clonal expansion.
C. Mutuality Relationship.
They have a mutual relationship by which both benefit.
When the hummingbird takes a sip off the daffodil, they are not sucking their strength out, they are simply sucking out pollen, which they then transfer to other flowers.
This process benefits both the plant and the bird.