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Exocytosis
Exocytosis
Exocytosis
Exocytosis
Exocytosis
Exocytosis
Osmosis, diffusion, and facilitated diffusion are all opposites of active transport.
In exocytosis, materials are exported out of the cell via secretory vesicles. In this process, the Golgi complex packages macromolecules into transport vesicles that travel to and fuse with the plasma membrane. This fusion causes the vesicle to spill it's contents out of the cell.
In exocytosis, materials are exported out of the cell via secretory vesicles. In this process, the Golgi complex packages macromolecules into transport vesicles that travel to and fuse with the plasma membrane. This fusion causes the vesicle to spill it's contents out of the cell.
osmosis
The vesicles which are formed from rER first transports the proteins to the Golgi apparatus, fusing with the membranes of this organelle. The proteins are then processed as they pass through the Golgi Apparatus. The vesicles then bud off the Golgi apparatus and fuse with the plasma membrane after moving through the cytoplasm. The contents are the vesicles can be released to the outside of the cell in a process known as exocytosis.Cells also use vesicles to transport other cell products besides proteins. Examples include hormones and digestive enzymes.
Vesicular transport is an active process in which materials move into or out of the cell enclosed as vesicles. Vesicles are bubble-like structures surrounded by a membrane. They can form at the cell membrane or can fuse with the membrane. Solid particles, droplets of fluid or many molecules at a time can be moved across the membrane in vesicles. Vesicular transport is also known as bulk transport because large quantities of materials can be transported in this way. Th ere are two basic types of vesicular transport-endocytosis and exocytosis.