It will probably be very applicational. I would know the gated ion channel opens a channel which allows ions to flow down their concentration gradient while the other two are going to activate a transduction pathway with adenylyl cyclase (G protein) or phosphorylation of intermediation (tyrosine)... but it will probably just be a picture with questions about if something goes wrong.
guys im so cooked for this test tmr
Hello! What if for the identify the independent variable questions, you put both independent variables? Would you be marked wrong?
i dont think so
Both would be acceptable
Which unit do you talk about groups like carboxyl and hydroxyl groups? Thank you!
Unit 1 technically but I don’t know if specifically talk about the functional groups.
How in-depth should my knowledge be about the different reception types?(G-Proteins Linked Receptors, Tyrosine Kinase Receptors, etc.)
It will probably be very applicational. I would know the gated ion channel opens a channel which allows ions to flow down their concentration gradient while the other two are going to activate a transduction pathway with adenylyl cyclase (G protein) or phosphorylation of intermediation (tyrosine)... but it will probably just be a picture with questions about if something goes wrong.
@@apbiopenguinsinsta-review4538 Thanks for the reply! So, the ion channels are always facilitating passive transport, not active?
@@justinkenneally4988 correct. You can’t “pump” with a channel. It’s just a passage way.
Do you think they might ask a conceptual frq about the different types of receptors
Plausible
Will this kind of question come in exam
There were a lot of questions, but if it was one of the FRQs - there is a chance.
Oh okay
Thank u for replying to me
I watch most of ur videos it's helpful