Answer:
During pregnancy it is the eighth month I think. Sorry if it’s wrong.
Explanation:
Answer:
Self-antigens are not recognized and attacked by the T cells.
Explanation:
In immunology, the antigens are those substances which are bound by the antibodies. The antigens can be originated from within the bodies, known as self antigens or from outside the body, known as non-self antigens. The immune system identifies and attacks non-self invaders or the foreign harmful objects present in the body. It does not attack the self-antigens under the normal conditions. This is due to the negative selection of T cells of the thymus.
Answer:
used by plants as nutrients i think
Explanation:
The different levels of organisation within the biosphere, from the smallest to largest are:
1. Individual, species or creatures
the organisms
2. population
The entire populace
3. community
The total population at a given point in time and place.
4. ecosystem
The biotic and abiotic factors that are interacting.
5. biome
The ecosystems that share the same characeristics and abiotic factors.
6. biosphere
The entire living and nonliving organism in the planet earth, from prokaryotic cells to eukaryotic cells and how organic compounds from its enviroment aid in their survival
Answer:
a fuel for cellular respiration and a starting material for making other organic molecules.
Explanation:
Plants have the ability to produce sugars by the process of photosynthesis. Plants can convert the inorganic CO2 from the air into the organic nutrients such as sugars. Plants store sugars so that they can serve as a source of ATP for the cells as and when required. The sugars enter the process of cellular respiration and are oxidized into CO2 and H2O. In addition, the energy of chemical bonds of the sugars is used to form ATP molecules.
Plants also use sugars to synthesize other organic molecules. For example, several intermediates of Kreb's cycle can serve as precursors for the synthesis of amino acids. Amino acids are joined together to form different proteins.