Membranes do not have a stiff outside. I suspect the answer you are looking for is the cell wall, which is a stiff structure found outside the cell membrane of a plant cell, but separate from it.
Membranes do not have a stiff outside. I suspect the answer you are looking for is the cell wall, which is a stiff structure found outside the cell membrane of a plant cell, but separate from it.
That is the cell wall.It is a non living organell which protects and supports the cell.
This is the cell wall. In bacteria it is made of peptidoglycan and in plants it is made of cellulose.
Haha, you must be working on the protist crossword, the answer is pellicle.
the cell wall, or it could also be the cell membrane, the cell wall is outside the cell membrane
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the cell wall.
cell membrane
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The process of expelling particles or liquids outside the cell membrane is called exocytosis. During exocytosis, membrane-bound vesicles inside the cell fuse with the cell membrane and release their contents outside the cell. This process is important for transporting molecules out of the cell and maintaining cellular homeostasis.
For plant cells, they have a cell membrane and covering the cell membrane is a cell wall. The cell wall is for the structure of the plant. For animal cells, they just have a cell membrane.
The layer on the outside of a cell membrane is called the cell wall. It provides structural support and protection to the cell. While not present in all cells, it is common in plant and bacterial cells.