Biology, 03.03.2020 19:29 lizzymikaelson22
When you scratch a mosquito bite, you damage some cells. Damaged cells release histamine, which causes localized swelling. The swelling can crush cells, causing them to release more histamine. This is an example of
Answers: 3
Biology, 21.06.2019 23:00
Neelaredoxin is a 15-kda protein that is a gene product common in anaerobic prokaryotes. it has superoxide-scavenging activity, and it is constitutively expressed. in addition, its expression is not further induced during its exposure to o2 or h2o2 (silva, g., et al. 2001. j. bacteriol. 183: 4413–4420). which of the following statements best describes neelaredoxin synthesis? a-neelaredoxin is produced at all times; levels are constant even when exposed to o2 or h2o2.b-neelaredoxin is produced at all times; exposure to o2 or h2o2 increases expression.c-neelaredoxin is produced at all times; exposure to o2 or h2o2 decreases or prevents expression.d-neelaredoxin is only produced when there is exposure to o2 or h2o2.
Answers: 3
Biology, 22.06.2019 09:30
Did the vinegar diffuse all the way to the center of any of the cubes? if so, which ones? what does this tell you about surface area-to-volume ratio and the diffusion rate?
Answers: 1
Biology, 22.06.2019 10:30
Jason, a dog breeder, decides to mate a poodle with a golden labrador retriever. he wants to get puppies with the curly hair of the poodle and the color of the labrador. what concept is shown in this example? question 6 options: artificial selection adaptation evolution natural selection
Answers: 1
Biology, 22.06.2019 15:00
The scales shown in the introduction measure mass, or the amount of matter in a particular object. the scientific law of conservation of mass states that matter cannot be created or destroyed during a chemical reaction, but it can change from one form to another. did the simulation support this scientific law? explain why or why not.
Answers: 1
When you scratch a mosquito bite, you damage some cells. Damaged cells release histamine, which caus...
Biology, 26.06.2021 15:10
Social Studies, 26.06.2021 15:10
English, 26.06.2021 15:10
Mathematics, 26.06.2021 15:10
Mathematics, 26.06.2021 15:10
Mathematics, 26.06.2021 15:10
History, 26.06.2021 15:10
Mathematics, 26.06.2021 15:10
English, 26.06.2021 15:10
Advanced Placement (AP), 26.06.2021 15:10
Physics, 26.06.2021 15:20