Biology, asked by anil271974, 5 months ago


How do neutral solutes move across the plasma membrane? Can the polar
molecules also move across it in the same way? If not, then how are these
transported across the membrane?

Answers

Answered by Waniiqra1234
2

Explanation:

Neutral solutes move across the membrane by diffusion along the concentration gradient ie.., from higher concentration to the lower. ⭐. No, the polar molecules cannot pass through the non polar bilayer. ... The polar molecules require a carriervprotein of the membrane to facilitate their transport across the membrane.

Answered by janvichandwani2
2

Answer:

Neutral solutes move across the membrane by diffusion along the concentration gradient ie.., from higher concentration to the lower. ⭐. No, the polar molecules cannot pass through the non polar bilayer. ... The polar molecules require a carriervprotein of the membrane to facilitate their transport across the membrane.

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