Answer: b. anterior.
Explanation:
Hypothalamic releasing and inhibiting hormones control the release of other hormones from the pituitary gland and they are secreted by neurons. They enter the anterior pituitary through blood vessels and to do this, <u>there is a bridge of capillaries that connects the hypothalamus, which is a part of the brain, to the anterior pituitary gland</u> and it is called the hypophyseal portal system. This system allows the hypothalamic hormones to be transported to the anterior pituitary without entering the systemic circulation.
So, the secretion of the hormones from the pituitary gland is regulated by releasing and inhibiting hormones from the hypothalamus. The six hormones produced by the anterior pituitary gland are:
- luteinizing hormone (LH)
- follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH)
- thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH)
- adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)
- prolactin (PRL)
- growth hormone (GH)
D .............. im pretty sure its this one :)
The correct answer is: Protons are pumped out of the mitochondrial matrix into the intermembrane space
Chemiosmosis can be described as movement of ions across a selectively permeable membrane, down their electrochemical gradient. It occurs during the cellular respiration within mitochondria and it is involved in ATP synthesis (oxidative phosphorylation via ATP synthase).
Electrons from electron carriers (NADH and FADH) donate electrons to the electron transport chain and that causes changes in protein complexes of electron transport chain. As a consequence, protein complexes pump H+ across a selectively permeable cell membrane from the mitochondrial matrix into the intermembrane space of mitochondria.
H+ can only get back and pass through the inner mitochondrial membrane with the help of ATP synthase (down their electrochemical gradient). ATP synthase turned by the force of the H+ diffusing through it forms ATP by adding a phosphate to ADP.
I believe one full cycle of meiosis produces four haploid cells.
Hope it helps!
I think it’s Glucose but I’m not sure