Mucous membrane

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    Gba Research Paper

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    Receptors are protein molecules that receive chemical signals in the form of ligands and induce responses at cellular level. They are localized at the cell surface, cytoplasm or the nucleus, depending on their amino acid sequences. In addition to using these three different localizations to categorize receptors, the types of action of receptors are also used as a mean of classification. The four main classifications of receptors are: 1. Ionotropic (or ligand-gated ion channel) receptors, 2.…

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    cytoplasm by the outer and inner mitochondrial membrane.The outer membrane is porous and freely traversed by ions and small, uncharged molecules through pore-forming membrane proteins (porins), such as the voltage-dependent anion channel VDAC [19]. Any larger molecules, especially proteins, have to be imported by special translocases. Because of its porosity, there is no membrane potential across the outer membrane. By contrast, the inner membrane is a tight diffusion barrier to all ions and…

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    In this experiment, we set out to determine the osmolarity of a potato. In order to do this, we placed potato pieces in seven different solutions of varying sucrose molarity. First, we weighed each potato piece to obtain the initial weight, shown in Figure 1. Then, we split the pieces vertically before placing them in the cubs containing the sucrose solutions. In each cup was a solution of sucrose with a molarity ranging from 0.0M to 0.6M. After placing the potatoes in the cups, we allowed them…

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    cell is, the more difficult it is to transport nutrients and oxygen from outside of the cell into the inside of the cell. Consequently, the large cell would have more trouble transporting water, nutrients, and oxygen across the cell membrane and through the plasma membrane. In reality, the Blob would have problems maintaining sufficient transport and would suffer from malnutrition. The size of a cell determines the amount of nutrients, water, and oxygen needed, therefore, the volume of a cell…

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    Muscle Cells Lab Report

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    length played a role in the amount of force a muscle produces. In order to fully understand how a muscle contracts, it is necessary to first understand the structure of muscle cells. Muscles cells are large cells that are surrounded by a special membrane called the sarcolemma and are filled with fluid called sarcoplasm. The sarcoplasm abounds with mitochondria for energy production and ribosomes for protein manufacturing. Muscle cells are also packed with many…

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    Neurons are one of the most important cells in living animals. There are billions of neurons throughout our bodies, especially the brain which is the control house of the body. Neurons are what help us see, hear, taste, and feel sensation. This is all do to a critical phenomenon known as action potential. Action potential is caused by a change in various ions, specifically sodium and potassium. When the neuron is in a resting state with -70mV, there is a great amount of potassium ions inside the…

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    blood, the student noticed that the cells appeared to become smaller.” Now the question stands, why did the red blood cells appear smaller? There were three possible explanations proposed. Explanation one reads, “Sugar molecules push on the cell membranes and make the cells appear smaller.” Explanation two states,”Water molecules move out of the cell because the concentration of water is greater inside the cell than it is outside the cell.” Finally, explanation three reads, “Sugar molecules…

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    Facilitated Diffusion

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    Simple diffusion is a passive process involving the movement of smaller, nonpolar molecules moving across a membrane from a high concentration area to a low concentration area without any forces acting upon the substance. Facilitated diffusion is a passive diffusion process involving the transportation of large or polar molecules and ions across the cell membrane (which they cannot normally pass through) with the help of transport proteins. Because facilitated diffusion is a form of passive…

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    SNARE

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    laboratory developed the SNARE hypothesis describing a model of SNAREs involvement in vesicle targeting and fusion. Their model explains that a transport vesicle (v-SNARE) and a target membrane (t-SNARE) with the aid of NSF, SNAPs and other yet unknown proteins bring the v-SNARE in close proximity to the t-SNARE facilitating membrane fusion (Sollner et al., 1993). It is now widely accepted that SNAREs serve as the core machineries necessary for vesicle targeting and fusion but are regulated by…

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    Ion channels are membrane proteins that selectively allow the permeation of ions into and out of cells (Fig.1a ###image messes with formatting). Some channels have evolved to also sense changes in the electrical potential across a membrane. A potential above a certain voltage will trigger the opening of these ion-conducting pores, releasing large stores of ions across the membrane. These voltage-gated ion channels allow for the generation of electrical stimuli (the firing of neurons via the…

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