A tissue becomes a target tissue when it is affected or stimulated by a specific amino acid. The target tissue has the appropriate receptors to make it susceptible to the hormone.
A tissue is considered a target tissue when it has specific receptors for a particular hormone or chemical signal. These receptors allow the tissue to respond to the signal by initiating specific biological responses. Target tissues are often the primary sites where the hormone or signal exerts its effects in the body.
Hormones affect target cells because target cells have receptors that bind with certain hormones (they're specific). If a cell does not have a receptor then it is not affected by hormones. Target cells (which do have the receptor for a particular hormone) would be affected by the hormone.
The hormone that makes a pregnant woman have their joints unstable is Relaxin.
the 18th tissue and the 65909867th tissue
The vascular cambium tissue makes xylem and phloem.
Osteoblast makes new bone tissue
Target
cortisol
Fibrocartilage is the kind of tissue that makes up the intervertebral discs. The segments of the spine are connected with this tissue.
Vascular tissue is the tissue which makes steam strong . As their are no such tissue in steam of aquatic plant it makes them weak.
muscle tissue
Cologyn is another way of spelling collagen, which is the protein that makes up the connective tissue in animals. It makes up about 25% of all of the protein that an animal contains.