A peplomer is a glycoprotein spike on a viral capsid or viral envelope. These protrusions will only bind to certain receptors on the host cell; they are essential for both host specificity and viral infectivity.
The answer is muscle weakness, fatigue and dysrhythmias. The distinctive indication of hypokalemia contains muscle faintness, leg spasms, fatigue, paresthesia and dysrhythmias. Indicators of hypercalcemia contain nausea, vomiting, constipation, bone pain, too much urination, dehydration, misperception, weariness and indistinct speech. Reduced cognitive capability and hypertension may outcome from hyperchloremia in which constipation is a indication of hypercalcemia.
2NH3 is equivalent to N2 + H6 since the 2 at the beginning gets distributed to both atoms. Knowing this you can rewite the equation as
H2 + N2 = H6 + N2
The N2 can cancel out leaving
H2 = H6
You now have to ask ‘2 times what equals 6?’ The answer is obviously 3 at this point.
Answer: C. 3
Answer:
The correct answer would be the active transport across the cell membrane.
The main functions of the cell membrane are a barrier, regulates transport (passive, facilitated, and active), the presence of receptors et cetera.
Only active transport (such as sodium pump, calcium pumps et cetera) requires the input of energy (ATP) for proper functioning. It uses energy to pump substances against the concentration gradient.
Thus, only active transport would be affected if less cellular energy is available.