<span>C. The offspring will inherit neither the genotype or phenotype change.</span>
The repository of bile produced by the liver is one of the gallbladder's top priorities.
Bile is required to break down the body's fats and lipids, making it vital for digestion. In addition, it helps in the metabolism of bilirubin, which is produced when RBCs break down.
The gallbladder serves several essential purposes, including the following:
- The ability to empty and restock its bile reserves in response to intestinal hormones like cholecystokinin.
- To assist in controlling the bile's chemical makeup (the percentage of water, bile salts and more)
- To regulate the small intestine's bile flow.
- To contract (secreting bile into the biliary tract and duodenum)
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Answer:
c) Acetyl COA carboxylase; citrate
Explanation:
Citrate serves as an allosteric activator for fatty acid synthesis and diverts the cellular metabolism from the consumption of metabolic fuel to the storage of fuel as fatty acids. When the concentrations of mitochondrial acetyl-CoA and ATP increase, citrate is transported out of mitochondria into the cytosol. In the cytosol, citrate serves as the precursor of cytosolic acetyl-CoA and an allosteric activator of acetyl-CoA carboxylase.
The enzyme Acetyl-CoA carboxylase has three functional regions. Its biotin carboxylase activates CO2 and its transcarboxylase transfers activated CO2 from biotin to acetyl-CoA to produce malonyl-CoA.