facilitated diffusion, secondary active transport and active transport
Vesicle-mediated transport is a type of intracellular transport where cellular materials are moved within a cell using membrane-bound vesicles. This process allows for the transport of molecules such as proteins, lipids, and other substances between different organelles within the cell or between the cell and its external environment.
Carrier-mediated transport can be either passive or active, depending on the type of carrier protein involved. Passive carrier-mediated transport allows molecules to move down their concentration gradient without requiring energy input, while active carrier-mediated transport moves molecules against their concentration gradient using energy from ATP or an electrochemical gradient.
A good analogy for a transport vesicle would be a passenger vehicle, like a bus. The analogy could work in two ways: molecules are to a transport vesicle as passengers are to a bus, or a transport vesicle is to a cell as a bus is to a city.
Factors that can increase the rate of mediated transport include an increase in the concentration gradient of the substance being transported, an increase in the number of transport proteins available, and an increase in the efficiency of the transport proteins. Additionally, factors such as temperature and pH can also affect the rate of mediated transport.
The process of transporting substances from the outside to the inside of a cell using a vesicle is called endocytosis. Endocytosis includes phagocytosis (engulfing solid particles), pinocytosis (engulfing liquid or small particles), and receptor-mediated endocytosis (specific molecules binding to receptors on the cell membrane).
Vesicular active transport
Transport Vesicle
transport the product to stores to sell
transport the product to stores to sell
Vesicular active transport
Its NOT 'on the inside surface of the cell membrane' Probably ' on the inside surface of the vesicle'
It is niether. Its is passive actually. http://www.mansfield.ohio-state.edu/~sabedon/campbl08.htm #38. under Endocytosis, which is active passport, includes the example of Receptor-Mediated Endocytosis.