When a cell is respiring aerobically, the two gases likely to be involved are oxygen and carbon dioxide. Oxygen is consumed during the process of cellular respiration to produce energy, while carbon dioxide is produced as a byproduct and expelled from the cell. This exchange is essential for maintaining cellular function and energy production.
Red blood cells are an example of a mammalian cell that is not capable of metabolizing glucose to carbon dioxide aerobically, as they lack mitochondria which are required for aerobic respiration. Instead, they rely on anaerobic glycolysis to produce energy in the form of ATP.
The cell wall is the structure that provides support for the cell, allows gases and water to pass through, and provides protection by maintaining the cell's shape and rigidity. It is found in plant cells, bacteria, fungi, and some protists.
plant cell
diffusion through the lipid bilayer.
In a hypotonic environment, an onion cell will fill up with water. Hypotonic refers to a solution that has lower osmotic pressure than the solution you're comparing it to.
NO
In a cell that is respiring aerobically (i.e. using oxygen), the mitochondria are the site of most ATP production.They are scattered through the cytoplasm, but tend to concentrate where the cell requires energy.
The oxygen passes through a bloodvessel called artery to an actively respiring muscle cell.
oxygen + glucose = Carbon dioxide + water
During muscle contraction/relaxation, energy is used up; this happens to greater degrees depending on how strenuous the exercise may be. When you run, or during aerobic respiration, the muscle cell's oxygen uptake increases; this is because oxygen is required to produce ATP when the muscle cells are respiring aerobically.
The kind of cell would you expect to find the most mitochondira includes any aerobically active cell.
Red blood cells are an example of a mammalian cell that is not capable of metabolizing glucose to carbon dioxide aerobically, as they lack mitochondria which are required for aerobic respiration. Instead, they rely on anaerobic glycolysis to produce energy in the form of ATP.
Why a blood clot is the coronary artery stops the red blood cells from respiring normally
Diffusion
When a gas moves in and out of a cell it is called diffusion.
for exchange of gases
nitrogen and hydrogen