题干

科学家为了探究影响细胞衰老的因素,进行了如下实验.

实验Ⅰ:分别在相同的条件下,体外培养胎儿、中年人和老年人的肺成纤维细胞,结果如下表:

细胞

胎儿

中年人

老年人

增殖代数

50

20

2~4

实验Ⅱ:分别将鼠、鸡、人和龟的体细胞在体外培养,结果如图:

实验Ⅲ:将年轻人体细胞去核后与老年人细胞核融合;将老年人体细胞去核后与年轻人的细胞核融合,分别在体外培养,结果前者不分裂,后者旺盛分裂.

(1)每个实验可以得出结论是:

实验Ⅰ____ ;

实验Ⅱ____ ;

实验Ⅲ____ ;

(2)从以上实验结果来看,影响细胞衰老的内在因素有____ 等.

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同类题5

阅读理解

    In its early history, Chicago had floods frequently, especially in the spring, making the streets so muddy that people, horses, and carts got stuck. An old joke that was popular at the time went something like this: A man is stuck up to his waist in a muddy Chicago street. Asked if he needs help, he replies,“No, thanks. I've got a good horse under me.”

    The city planners decided to build an underground drainage(排水) system, but there simply wasn't enough difference between the height of the ground level and the water level. The only two options were to lower the Chicago River or raise the city.

    An engineer named Ellis Chesbrough convinced the city that it had no choice but to build the pipes above ground and then cover them with dirt. This raised the level of the city's streets by as much as 12 feet.

    This of course created a new problem: dirt practically buried the first floors of every building in Chicago. Building owners were faced with a choice: either change the first floors of their buildings into basements, and the second stories into main floors, or hoist the entire bulidings to meet the new street level. Small wood-frame buildings could be lifted fairly easily. But what about large, heavy structures like the Tremont Hotel, which was a six-story brick building?

    That's where George Pullman came in. He had developed some house-moving skills successfully. To lift a big structure like Tremont Hotel, Pullman would place thousands of jackscrews(螺旋千斤顶) beneath the building's foundation. One man was assigned to operate each section of roughly 10 jackscrews. At Pullman's signal each man turned his jackscrew the same amount at the same time, thereby raising the building slowly and evenly. Astonishingly, the Tremont Hotel stayed open during the entire operation, and many of its guests didn't even notice anything was happening.

    Some people like to say that every problem has a solution. But in Chicago's early history, every engineering solution seemed to create a new problem. Now that Chicago's waste water was draining efficiently into the Chicago River, the city's next step was to clean the polluted river.