Answer: i dont understand it....
Explanation:
NO, they should not.
Erythrocytes, leucocytes, and proteins (albumin)
are not small enough to pass through the capillaries of the
glomerulus unless there is damage to the glomerulus. However, glucose does pass through into the glomerular filtrate. Nonetheless, glucose is fully reabsorbed back in the proximal
convoluted tubule (unless you have severe diabetes).
Answer:
False
Explanation:
Rearrangements on introns and transposons usually don't cause severe consequences because those sequences are not part of coding genes and therefore cannot code for proteins, and if a rearrangement occur within a coding sequence of a gene might cause an incomplete and non-functional protein causing severe consequences to expression levels of that particular gene.
<span>a. GnRH
b. LH and FSH
c. estradiol
d. LH and FSH
e. estradiol and progesterone
f. LH and FSH
g. estradiol and progesterone</span>