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eimsori [14]
3 years ago
14

Give examples of structural carbohydrate molecules?

Biology
1 answer:
Tom [10]3 years ago
3 0

Answer:

Glucose, galactose, and fructose are common monosaccharides, whereas common disaccharides include lactose, maltose, and sucrose. Starch and glycogen, examples of polysaccharides, are the storage forms of glucose in plants and animals, respectively. The long polysaccharide chains may be branched or unbranched.

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Why can't differentiation cells be reversed?
Zolol [24]

Answer:

In general, the process of cell differentiation is irreversible. However, under certain conditions, the differentiated cells are also unstable, and their gene expression patterns can also undergo reversible changes and return to their undifferentiated state. This process is called dedifferentiation

hope it will help you

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Nick is researching why baking powder is a common baking ingredient. He learns that baking powder contains tartaric acid and sod
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A. Carbon dioxide gas forms because an acid and a carbonate react.

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Lily visits her family doctor. He tells her that the upset stomach she experiences after drinking milk is caused by too little l
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If i would have to make an educated guess, i would say C.
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What is the density of a liquid with a mass of 17.4 g and a volume of 20 mL?
iren [92.7K]

Answer:

The density of the liquid is 0.87 g/ml

Explanation:

Density = 17.4g divides 20ml = 0.87 g/ml (rounded to one significant figure)

8 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Investigate substances containing carbon or oxygen that relate to biological processes. Explain their main function in those pro
Scorpion4ik [409]

Answer:

Well, you already have the answer, but I can try to elaborate XD

So, DNA: contains genetic information that is necessary for biological functioning and reproduction.

More specifically, it contains the genetic instructions through gene encoding that instructs the cell what to do. A specialized complex ribosome interacts with the DNA molecules and "reads" it, changing the genes from the DNA into proteins that the cell as a whole can function upon. It is also crucial to forming a whole cell in offspring, since only the genes from the two parents combined (in humans at least) can produce an offspring with all genes intact. Those who do not have genetic disorders, a famous one being Down Syndrome.

Next, RNA: a molecule necessary for expressing genes and making proteins.

Connecting to the paragraph above for DNA, RNA also assists in the process by reading the ribosome that reads the DNA itself. Complicated, I know. All you have to know, however, is that the RNA, in this case called mRNA since it serves as a messenger, hence, the "m", reads the codons produced by the ribosome when it reads the DNA, and makes proteins according to those codons, and those proteins then scatter all across the cell to execute instructions.

Now, we move onto nitrogen and phosphorous: both are found in amino acids, the building blocks of proteins.

That is actually partially wrong. Amino acids do not contain phosphorous, but do contain nitrogen. Not exactly sure what went wrong on your end there, but nitrogen is a basic building block for amino acids, which are basic building blocks themselves for proteins. To be more clear, amino acids are made of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen atoms. No phosphorus there!

Finally, enzymes: special proteins that accelerate chemical reactions in cells.

This is correct. Enzymes typically lower the activation energy required for reactions to happen. More specifically, enzymes make the reaction molecules more active, hence, lowering the threshold for the amount of energy you have to put in before the molecules start crashing into each other hard enough to have a chemical reaction. Of course, enzymes do not participate in the reaction itself, which makes them incredibly useful for spurring on chemical reactions since they can be used multiple times.

Yes i know the answer is long

ididnt know how big or small you wanted it

so......yea

hope it helps

7 0
3 years ago
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