Glucose moves from the plasma into a skeletal muscle cell, where it is used for energy. through which fluid compartment does glucose move between the plasma and the skeletal muscle cell?
(a) intracellular fluid
(b) interstitial fluid
(c) extracellular fluid inside of blood vessels
(d) cytosol
(B) Interstitial fluid
Explanation:
The interstitial fluid and blood plasma together make the extracellular fluid. The extracellular fluids are present outside the cells. The extracellular fluid that is present in the narrow spaces between cells of tissues is known as interstitial fluid. When a substance moves from blood plasma into the cells of a tissue, it crosses the interstitial fluid present between its cells. Therefore, when a skeletal muscle cell picks glucose molecules from blood plasma, it moves from plasma to the interstitial fluid to enter the cell.
i think it is true in my reasonment ..
the relative atomic mass of an element is the mass of one atom of that element, relative to 1/12th of the mass of a 1212c atom. to convert to an absolute mass in kg, it is necessary to multiply by 1.661×10−271.661×10−27.
the relative atomic mass is roughly equal to the number of neutrons, plus the number of protons, in the nucleus of the atom.
for elements with more than one stable isotope (different types of nucleus with different numbers of neutrons but the same number of protons), the quoted mass is usually the average mass, weighted by the relative abundance of the different isotopes.