The elementary body is the infective form of chlamydia that enters the host cell.
Chlamydia is a bacterium, and so it has a nucleus.
Yes, chlamydia get their ATP from the host cell.
Chlamydia derives energy from the ATP of the host cell.
Chlamydia includes a bacterial cell wall, ribosomes, RNA, DNA, and other typical bacterial cell parts.
You would lower your risk of complication from untreated chlamydia.
Chlamydia lives off its host cell. It's an obligate intracellular parasite.
Sporozoite is the infective stage of Maaria.
Chlamydia can't make its own energy, so it uses ATP from the host cell.
Chlamydia becomes active as soon as it enters the body.
To get from cell to cell across a table as you enter text, press enter.
The process by which large molecules enter a cell through pouches in the membrane is called endocytosis. During endocytosis, the cell membrane forms a pouch around the molecule, encloses it, and brings it into the cell as a vesicle. This allows the cell to take in larger molecules that would not be able to pass through the membrane on their own.
The thing that forms a outside of a cell if there isn't a cell wall is a cell membrane.