Osmosis
This process is called exocytosis. Exocytosis is a cellular process where vesicles fuse with the cell membrane, releasing their contents outside the cell. It is important for exporting molecules and particles from the cell.
a vesicular nucleus, comparatively basophilic cytoplasm, and prominent nucleoli.
The Golgi complex packs proteins and other materials into membrane-bound vesicles called transport vesicles. These vesicles transport the proteins to different parts of the cell or to the cell membrane for release outside the cell.
The process that requires transport vesicles to transfer material out of a cell is called exocytosis.
Glyco-protein cell coats, as compared to a bacterial cell wall.
The Golgi apparatus is responsible for packaging protein molecules in vesicles for transport and secretion. It modifies, sorts, and packages proteins into vesicles that are then transported to their final destination within the cell or to the cell membrane for secretion.
The vesicles because it contains and transports various substances such as protein
Membrane bound vesicles.
Dynein is the protein that powers the movement of both cilia and vesicles within a cell. It is a motor protein that uses ATP hydrolysis to generate force and facilitate movement along microtubules.
The Golgi apparatus produces vesicles filled with proteins that are ready for transport outside of the cell. These vesicles are then released and transported to their target destinations within or outside the cell.
The process by which a cell gets rid of a large protein molecule is called exocytosis. During exocytosis, the protein is packaged into vesicles that fuse with the cell membrane, allowing the contents to be released outside the cell. This mechanism is essential for cellular communication and waste removal.
Vesicles that transport materials out of the cell are formed at the Golgi apparatus in a process called exocytosis. The vesicles contain the materials to be transported and fuse with the cell membrane to release them outside the cell.