Active transport uses energy such as plants taking in minerals while passive transport is opposite as it does not use energy.
Answer:
Explanation: i don't know
monosaccharides and glycosidic. Good luck!
Answer:
A mutation
<em>What can cause changes in a DNA sequence?</em>
A mutation is a change in the DNA sequence. There are several different methods by which mutation happens. Of course, chemically produced mutations receive the most media attention. There are a wide range of substances that can cause mutations, usually by attaching to the DNA and causing it to break, requiring an incomplete repair, or by preventing DNA replication, forcing the replication machinery to repeat the DNA poorly.
However, other factors, such as exposure to radiation or light, can also cause DNA mutations. In reality, UV and X ray light are known to cause mutations by changing the DNA's base composition or causing DNA breaks.
Mutations are also spontaneously caused by DNA replication. Although it occurs extremely infrequently, the replication complex does occasionally make mistakes and insert the incorrect DNA base, which leads to a significant amount of mutations over the course of generations.
Thank you,
Eddie
Answer: Large molecules and wastes move through the membrane through forms of active transport- endocytosis and exocytosis.
Explanation:
Molecules are moved across the cell membrane via different mechanisms like diffusion, facilitated diffusion and passive transport; however, some very large molecules require specialized types of active transport to cross over- these are endocytosis and exocytosis.
During endocytosis large molecules cells and cell fragments moved across the plasma membrane through a process of <em>invagination;</em> piece of the external cell membrane falls into itself and forms a small pocket that surrounds the target molecule this breaks off from the membrane to form an intracellular vesicle. Different methods of endocytosis such as <em>phagocytosis, pinocytosis </em>and receptor-mediated <em>endocytosis</em>, take in cells, water and targeted substances respectively.
Like endocytosis, the particles (signal proteins, neurotransmitters and waste material) are surrounded by a phospholipid membrane. However, in exocytosis, this membrane is formed in the cytoplasm, and merges with the plasma membrane’s interior in a process <em>opposite to </em>endocytosis; material is removed from the cell and exported into the cell’s exterior called the extracellular space.