<span>Yeast cells reproduce quickly by budding. This is a form of asexual reproduction so all the yeast cells are identical.
Hope this helps!</span>
The five proteins of the myofilaments are the following:
<span>1.
</span>Myosin, shaped like a golf club, with two
polypeptides intertwined to form a shaftlike tail and a double globular head,
or cross-bridge, projecting from it at an angle.
<span>2. </span>Fibrous actin is like a bead necklace—a string
of subunits called globular (G) actin. Each G actin has an active site that can
bind to the head of a myosin molecule.
<span>3. </span>Tropomyosin. It blocks the active sites of six
or seven G actins and prevents myosin cross-bridges from binding to them when a
muscle fiber is relaxed.
<span>4. </span>Troponin a smaller calcium-binding protein bound
to each tropomyosin molecule.
<span>5. </span>Titin (connectin), run through the core of a
thick filament, emerge from the end of it, and connect it to a structure called
the Z disc.
Answer:
1. B. NADH
2. B. hydrolysis of ATP.
3. C. ATP is produced from protein.
4. Option C.
5. Option C. Oxygen
6. Option D. Glucose.
7. Carbondioxide.
8. Metabolism.
9. Electron carriers.
10. Electrons.
Explanation:
Cellular respiration is a series of metabolic processes that break down sugars or food to produce energy. ATP is the cellular energy produced during cellular respiration. Cellular respiration requires oxygen which is also called aerobic respiration. There are stages of cellular respiration and they include; glycolysis, pyruvate oxidation, Krebs cycle or citric acid and oxidative phosphorylation. During cellular respiration, glucose is broken down into carbondioxide and water. Along the way, ATP is produced from the processes that transform glucose.