Answer:
The correct answer is "It prevents spontaneous muscle's contraction".
Explanation:
Muscle contraction is produce by the interaction of actin and myosin filaments. Basically, myosin binds to the active sites of actin, which produces a protein complex (known as actomyosin) that allows that the filaments slide past each other and generate a contraction. When troponin and tropomyosin block the active sites of actin prevents spontaneous muscle's contraction, because a nervous impulse is needed to remove the inhibitors and that myosin starts the contraction.
I think the correct answer from the choices listed above is option B. During diffusion, when the concentration of molecules on both sides of a membrane is the same, the molecules will <span>stop moving across the membrane. This is because equilibrium has already been achieved and there is no more driving force which is the concentration gradient present.</span>