Answer:
The correct answer is - disrupting microtubule assembly and proper formation of the mitotic spindle and the kinetochore.
Explanation:
Vinblastine is known for treating cancer cells by sending them to apoptosis. It interferes with the synthesis of microtubules. It binds to the microtubular proteins of the mitotic spindle that causes disrupting microtubule assembly.
It also prevents from proper formation of the mitotic spindle and the kinetochore which is essential to separating chromosomes during anaphase. They arrest mitosis and cause cell death.
Answer:
Sensory cells last approximately two weeks and are renewed frequently.
Explanation:
Answer:
Fasting can definitely raise blood glucose. This is due to the effect of insulin falling and the rising counter-regulatory hormones including increased sympathetic tone, noradrenaline, cortisol and growth hormone, in addition to glucagon. These all have the effect of pushing glucose from liver storage into the blood. This is normal. If you are not eating, you want to use some stored glucose. The question is this – if you are not eating, and your blood glucose went up, where did that glucose come from? It can only have come from your own body (liver). So, it’s a natural phenomenon, and the fasting now allows your body to use some of the glucose for energy.
Answer:
wild animals collectively; the native fauna (and sometimes flora) of a region.
Explanation:
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Eukaryotic cells are theorized to have evolved from prokaryotes called the endosymbiotic theory. This explains that the most primitive eukaryotic cell engulfed a prokaryotic cell (by the process of phagocytosis) that is capable of cellular respiration and another prokaryotic cell that is capable of photosynthesis. These prokaryotic cells eventually became organelles and these organelles are the mitochondria and the chloroplast.