Usually, the membrane will burst and let its contents out into the cell membrane and get used up.
During endocytosis the pocket in the cell membrane breaks loose. After it breaks loose from the outer portion of the membrane, it forms a vacuole within the cytoplasm.
The pocket that results breaks loose from the outer portion of the cell membrane and forms a vacuole within the cytoplasm.....
IDC!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
In endocytosis, molecules or other particles that are too large to enter a cell by diffusion, facilitated diffusion, or active transport are conveyed within a vesicle formed from a section of the cell membrane. This process uses cellular energy.
"scientist have not discovered WHY it happens"It does not matter if scientists have discovered it or not, but the nuclear membrane disappears during PROPHASEHope this helped!!!
Before the nuclear envelope of a cell breaks down during the mitosis process, the DNA has to be duplicated. After the envelope dissolves, the chromosomes separate, then the cell finally splits.
a vesicle does not fuse with the cell membrane. The cell membrane goes through endo- or exocytosis to absorb or eject a substance. In this case, exocytosis occurs, so the cell membrane engulfs the particle, pumps it through the membrane with the help of transport proteins, and then the vesicle breaks off and is gone.
The nuclear membrane and nucleolus (these had disappeared during prophase). They had originally disappeared during prophase because the chromatin condensed into chromatids and then coiled into chromosomes and needed to seperate. They reappear during telophase because the chromatid uncoils again to form chromatin. This means that the cell no longer needs to seperate so it can reform the membrane and nucleolus.
In endocytosis, molecules or other particles that are too large to enter a cell by diffusion, facilitated diffusion, or active transport are conveyed within a vesicle formed from a section of the cell membrane. This process uses cellular energy.
Usually, the membrane will burst and let its contents out into the cell membrane and get used up.
"scientist have not discovered WHY it happens"It does not matter if scientists have discovered it or not, but the nuclear membrane disappears during PROPHASEHope this helped!!!
Before the nuclear envelope of a cell breaks down during the mitosis process, the DNA has to be duplicated. After the envelope dissolves, the chromosomes separate, then the cell finally splits.
Cellular Division.
It explodes and breaks your oven.
Breaks down
breaks down
During prometaphase, the nuclear envelope (membrane) breaks apart. However, some fragments of the nuclear envelope are still visible.
mRNA goes to the ribosomes for translation.
When part of one chromosome breaks off and attaches to another.
a vesicle does not fuse with the cell membrane. The cell membrane goes through endo- or exocytosis to absorb or eject a substance. In this case, exocytosis occurs, so the cell membrane engulfs the particle, pumps it through the membrane with the help of transport proteins, and then the vesicle breaks off and is gone.