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Salsk061 [2.6K]
3 years ago
6

What is the function of a heart vessel?

Biology
1 answer:
Phantasy [73]3 years ago
8 0

Answer:

The heart helps to provide oxygen and nutrients to the body's tissues and organs by ensuring a rich supply of blood. Not only do blood vessels carry oxygen and nutrients, they also transport carbon dioxide and waste products away from our cells.

Explanation:

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why would having both polar and nonpolar properties in a protective boundary be advantageous for the cell?
Reika [66]

Explanation:

The polar nature of the membrane’s surface can attract polar molecules, where they can later be transported through various mechanisms. Also, the non-polar  region of the membrane allows for the movement of small non-polar molecules across the membrane’s interior, while preventing the movement of polar molecules, thus maintaining the cell’s composition of solutes and other substances by limiting their movement.

Further explanation:

Lipids are composed of fatty acids which form the hydrophobic tail and glycerol which forms the hydrophilic head; glycerol is a 3-Carbon alcohol which is water soluble, while the fatty acid tail is a long chain hydrocarbon (hydrogens attached to a carbon backbone) with up to 36 carbons. Their polarity or arrangement can give these non-polar macromolecules hydrophilic and hydrophobic properties i.e. they are amphiphilic. Via diffusion, small water molecules can move across the phospholipid bilayer acts as a semi-permeable membrane into the extracellular fluid or the cytoplasm which are both hydrophilic and contain large concentrations of polar water molecules or other water-soluble compounds.

Similarly via osmosis, the water passes through the membrane due to the difference in osmotic pressure on either side of the phospholipid bilayer, this means that the water moves from regions of high osmotic pressure/concentration to regions of low pressure/ concentration to a steady state.

Transmembrane proteins are embedded within the membrane from the extracellular fluid to the cytoplasm, and are sometimes attached to glycoproteins (proteins attached to carbohydrates) which function as cell surface markers. Carrier proteins and channel proteins are the two major classes of membrane transport proteins; these allow large molecules called solutes (including essential biomolecules) to cross the membrane.

Learn more about membrane components at brainly.com/question/1971706

Learn more about plasma membrane transport at brainly.com/question/11410881

#LearnWithBrainly

5 0
4 years ago
1. clumped population dispersal ___ resources
SOVA2 [1]

Answer:

compete

limited growth rate

logistic

Explanation:

8 0
3 years ago
A man with type O blood and a woman with type AB blood get married. What is the probability that they will have a child with typ
Lisa [10]

Answer: o% chance

Explanation:

5 0
3 years ago
What is the difference between Diffusion and facilitated diffusion and osmosis
stira [4]

Hello fellow seventh grader, Similarities: 1.Both move from a region of high concentration to a region of low concentration through a partially permeable membrane. Differences: Facilitated diffusion is for any small particles which can pass through a partially permeable membrane while osmosis is only for water molecules.


5 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
True or false?? i'll mark u brainlist
Masja [62]

From what I remember from my bio class, the answer should be True. Hope this helps :)

3 0
3 years ago
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