The cell Wall
active transportAmoeba gets the food through the process of endocytosis.it can engulf the food particle from every side of its body(cell) surface by making psuedopodia when it comes in contact with the food particle.
Endocytosis - the way in which cells take in food and other materials. The cells membrane wraps around the particle it needs on its outside, ingesting it. This then becomes trapped within a vacuole inside the cells cytoplasm where it is broken down, digested, and absorbed by enzymes.
Phagocytosis is the process by which a cell engulfs a large particle by extending pseudopodia around it and bringing it into the cell in a membrane-bound vesicle.
Endocytosis, particularly, phagocytosis because the amoeba surrounds the food particle and engulfs it. The food particle is then enclosed into a food vacuole inside the cell where it can be accessed when the cell needs food.
The process by which specialized cells engulf large particles is called phagocytosis. During phagocytosis, the cell extends its membrane around the particle to form a phagosome, which is then fused with lysosomes to digest the particle. This process helps in removing pathogens, debris, and other foreign materials from the body.
i don't know but all these answers on this website wrong
i don't know but all these answers on this website wrong
Phagocytosis is the cellular process where a cell consumes a food particle that is too large to pass through a protein channel. It then forms an internal phagosome, or "food vacuole".
The process of bringing large undissolved particles into a cell would be phagocytosis, literally "cell eating." Hope that helps! :)
Fission is not a particle. It is a nuclear reaction in which the nucleus of an atom splits into two or more smaller nuclei, along with the release of a large amount of energy and usually some neutrons.
Small particle accelerators can sit on a desktop, large circular ones can be miles across
Cells called macrophages are responsible for getting rid of large particles in the body through a process called phagocytosis. In this process, macrophages engulf and digest the large particles, such as bacteria or debris, to maintain cellular homeostasis and protect the body from foreign invaders.