What are the differences between internal receptors and cell-surface receptors?


A. Intemal receptors bind to ligands that are hydrophobic, and the ligand-receptor complex directly enters the nucleus, initiating transcription and translation Cell-surface

receptors bind to hydrophilic ligands and initiate a signaling cascade that indirectly influences the making of a functional protein

B. Internal receptors bind to ligands that are hydrophilic, and ligand-receptor complex directly enters the nucleus, initiating transcription and translation. Cell-surface

receptors bind to hydrophobic ligands and initiate a signaling cascade that indirectly influences the making of a functional protein

C. Internal receptors bind to ligands that are hydrophobic and initiate the signaling cascade that indirectly influences the making of a functional protein. Cell-surface

receptors bind to hydrophilic ligands, and a ligand-receptor complex directly enters the nucleus, initiating transcription and translation.

D. Internal receptors are integral membrane proteins that bind to hydrophobic ligands, initiating a signaling cascade, which indirectly influences the making of a functional

protein. Cell-surface receptors bind to hydrophilic ligands, and the ligand-receptor complex directly enters the nucleus, initiating transcription and translation