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The vacuoles are what move and package things in a eukaryote cell as well as a animal and plant cell no mater what cell it is in it is all the same.
By not having a cell wall (cellulose) the animal cells are not rigid. When the cells are not rigid, they can move. If animal cells would have cells walls, animals wouldn't be able to move and be static as a plant. Also cells explode without cell wall. Actually plant cells do move...the roots move slowly down into the soil and the leaves move toward the light. Animal cells do not explode without a cell wall. They are stable enough with a few proteins and cholesterol in their membranes.
Transmembrane Proteins
Through the cell wall.
Both, the cells use it to move materials around the cell.
The vacuoles are what move and package things in a eukaryote cell as well as a animal and plant cell no mater what cell it is in it is all the same.
By not having a cell wall (cellulose) the animal cells are not rigid. When the cells are not rigid, they can move. If animal cells would have cells walls, animals wouldn't be able to move and be static as a plant. Also cells explode without cell wall. Actually plant cells do move...the roots move slowly down into the soil and the leaves move toward the light. Animal cells do not explode without a cell wall. They are stable enough with a few proteins and cholesterol in their membranes.
from where ? it depends on where in the cell you are talking about
Ribosomes make proteins on the rough ER. The proteins are packages into vesicles. The vesicles transport the newly made proteins from the rough ER to the Golgi apparautus. In the Golgi apparautus, proteins are pocessed and then packages into new versicles. Many of these varsicles move to the cells membran and release their contents outside the cell.
genetics
Endocytosis.
Channel proteins, a type of transport proteins to the cells, move molecules from outside of the membrane to the inside
Motor proteins help move organelles throughout the cell. Proteins always give energy, both in the human body system and within microscopic cells.
Move large particles into the cell
Transmembrane Proteins
No, the cell membrane, which is a phospholipid bilayer of embedded proteins, regulates what enters and leaves the cell.
The cell cotains phospholipids ,proteins , and carbohydrates. Carbohydrates can be attached to either the phospholipids or the proteins in the cell membrane. Sometimes carbohydrates (sugars) are attached to cell membrane phospholipids and to cell membrane proteins