No, HIV cannot attach itself to a muscle or a skin cell because the antigens on the HIV membrane are not complementary to their binding sites. However, HIV can attach itself to a helper T cell because the antigens on the HIV membrane are complementary to the binding sites of the helper T cells.
A muscle cell
Muscle cells have thousands more mitochondria.
b.
Muscle cells have more mitochondria because they require more energy to contract than skin cells.
skin cells, muscle cells, and bone cells.
muscle tissue
Skin attaches to a muscle called Cuditicial.
A muscle cell
Muscle cells have thousands more mitochondria.
They are both cells.
you be gone!
Muscle cells are very active relatively to the skin cell. So it has more mitochondria
"muscle"
The muscle cell, as they require more energy than other cells.
b.
Muscle cells have more mitochondria because they require more energy to contract than skin cells.
arrector pili muscle cell