Lysosomes
lysosome
Vesicles move around the cytoplasm so they can get needed nutrients around the cell so the cell can survive. The vesicles do this two ways, they can either be carted by special proteins called Dyein and Kinesin along the cytoskeleton, or they build up a substance called actin to a certain pressure then use it to jet around the cell.
Lysosomes function in this compartmentalization.
Neurotransmitters are stored in synaptic vesicles within axonal terminals for release into the synaptic cleft.
The vesicles maybe. Vacuoles are vesicles that contain mostly water anyway. I'll go with vacuoles then.
Lysosomes contain hydrolytic digestion enzymes. Lysosomes are membrane- bounded vesicles produced by the Golgi apparatus. When lysosomes are fused with macromolecules brought into the cell by vesicle formation at the plasma membrane, then the contents are digested by lysosome enzymes into simpler subunits that then enter the cytoplasm.
Mitochondria is power house of cell while synaptic vesicles are produced by golgi body and contain neurotransmitter .
The Golgi apparatus. It creates lysosomes.Lysosome: Lysosomes contain hydrolytic enzymes necessary for intracellular digestion. They are common in animal cells, but rare in plant cells.
lysosome
water
Because the lisosome, an enzyme, cannot deffrentiate the host from the food. So basically, it will degrade everything it encounters. In this case, intracellular digestion is a means of self-protection.
The organelle in animal cells that contain hydrolytic enzymes are lysosomes.
lysosome
Digestive (hydrolytic) enzymes are stored in lysosomes, which will fuse with a food vacuole.
Plant vacuoles contain hydrolytic enzymes and these are not found in your body.
no
Lysosome silly :)