I would agree with your answer of C. As there would need to be calcium to start with and they seem to come from the sarcoplasmic reticulum
Answer:
Adenine - Thymine
Guanine - Cytosine
Thymine - Adenine
Cytosine - Guanine
Explanation:
A goes to T, and vice versa. C goes to G, and vice versa. No matter how many times you flip a strand of DNA, A will always go with T and C will always go to G.
If it helps you, C and G are both curved letters and look very similar to each other. That's how I remembered that they went together. :)
Answer:
H. pylori uses the enzyme urease to breakdown urea into ammonia (NH3) & carbon dioxide (CO2), where NH3 can act as a buffer to the acidic solution in the stomach.
Explanation:
<em>H. pylori</em> is a bacteria that has the enzyme urease to breakdown urea into ammonia (NH3) & carbon dioxide (CO2). The compound of interest here would be ammonia, or NH3. NH3 is a base, although relatively weak to other stronger bases, which means it has a pH above 7. In the stomach, the pH is acidic, or below 7. By synthesizing ammonia, <em>H. pylori </em>is able to buffer the stomach solution in a manner so that it isn't entirely acidic, but more toward the basic side, thereby allowing for its survival.
13-13= 0, 19-13= 6, so then 0-6= -6
The pH scale is from 1-14 and if the water is on 7, it would make it a neutral substance (C).