Which of the following is not a part of acid soluble
pool?
(1) Sodium chloride (2) Sulphates
(3) Calcium carbonate (4) Glycogen
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Answer:
1) sodium chloride
Explanation:
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Life's primary building block is the cell. The execution of metabolic processes is one of a cell's most fundamental roles. The cell uses many chemicals to carry out this.
Cellular pools are the many molecules that make up a cell. Biomolecules are these substances. They can be both organic (such as lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids) and inorganic (such as water molecules) (ions, minerals, salts, etc.). You can discover this by doing an experiment.
The steps are as follows: -
- A modest experiment is carried out to obtain the chemical proof of the cellular pool. The experimental tissue is ground in trichloroacetic acid as the first stage in the procedure, and the resulting slurry is then filtered.
- One of the two portions, called filtrate, is known as an acid soluble pool. A pool of acid that is insoluble in acid is the upper fraction.
- The molecules in an acid-soluble pool range in molecular weight from 18 to 800 Daltons. Molecules in the acid-insoluble pool are heavier ones (more molecular weight).
- As a result, the chemicals that are soluble in acid are known as micromolecules, whereas those that are insoluble in acid are known as macromolecules.
- The majority of organic compounds dissolve in acid and filter out, forming the filtrate. The pool is referred to be acid-soluble.
- The acid-soluble pool may not include any inorganic substances.
The correct answer is:
Option 3 Calcium carbonate
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