no it does not
No it does not
Did NaCl require a transport protein for diffusion?
starch, sucrose, glucose, water, NaCl
No, not really. Diffusion works when molecules move from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration. They move independently of one another. So even if you have a high level of NaCl, the glucose concentration will diffuse in the same manner.
i = isotonic molar [glucose] / isotonic molar [NaCl] i = 14 M / 7 M = 2 i = isotonic molar [glucose] / isotonic molar [NaCl] i = 14 M / 7 M = 2 i = isotonic molar [glucose] / isotonic molar [NaCl] i = 14 M / 7 M = 2 i = isotonic molar [glucose] / isotonic molar [NaCl] i = 14 M / 7 M = 2
Glucose
carrier proteins transport glucose into a muscle cell
The
In the renal structure the proximal tubules plays a role for transport of glucose.
Because NaCl produces double no of particles(Na+ and Cl-) in solution as compare to Glucose (C6H12O6)
Glucose is transported through the blood