Interstitial fluid is an extracellular fluid that fills the spaces between most of the cells of the body (“bathes the cells“).
The total body water is divided between the intracellular compartment (intracellular fluid) and the extracellular compartment (extracellular fluid). Extracellular fluid is then subdivided into interstitial fluid and smaller components, such as the blood plasma, the cerebrospinal fluid and lymph.
Interstitial fluid consists of a water solvent which contains sugars, salts, fatty acids, amino acids, coenzymes, hormones, neurotransmitters, white blood cells and cell waste products. The composition of interstitial fluid is not always the same, it depends upon the exchanges between the cells in the biological tissue and the blood (different composition of the fluid in different tissues). The interstitial fluid acts as a connecting link between the blood and the cells.
The result would be an increased atmospheric concentration, which alters the distribution or abundance of species. Leached phosphorus can then lead to algal blooms and that clogs the aquatic ecosystem.
Answer: THEY ARE INVOLVED IN THE DISASSEMBLY OF THE NUCLEAR ENVELOPE
Explanation: The disassembly of the nuclear envelope is triggered by the cyclin‐dependent kinase at the onset of mitosis. At this point, Integral nuclear membrane proteins diffuse/move into the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) after nuclear envelope breakdown. The nuclear envelope reassembles around compact chromosome mass at late anaphase/telophase and the chromosomes condenses and become visible.