Cholesterol enters animal cells when the animal consumes and processes something that contains cholesterol. The cholesterol then enters through the cells permeable surface.
In its most basic function, red blood cells act as oxygen-transports for animal cells.
Cholesterol is the lipid that is found in the cell membrane of animal cells but not in plant cells. Cholesterol helps maintain the fluidity and stability of the cell membrane in animals by reducing its permeability to certain molecules.
Your body converts cholesterol into Vitamin D. Cholesterol also facilitates memory.
Cholesterol is primarily transported in the body within lipoproteins, such as LDL (low-density lipoprotein) and HDL (high-density lipoprotein). LDL carries cholesterol from the liver to the cells, while HDL removes excess cholesterol from the cells and transports it back to the liver for excretion or recycling.
Only in Foods that come from Animalss (its animals)
it packages and transports wastes and other things outside the cell
Rough Endoplasmic Reticulum for plant cells ONLY, or the golgi apperatus for animal cells scence animal cells do NOT have a Rough Endoplasmic Reticulum only a Endoplasmic Reticulum that makes the protiens.
Animal cells have centrioles, lysosomes, and cholesterol in their cell membranes which are not present in plant cells.
Cholesterol is a substance that is found in animal cells but not in plant cells. It plays a key role in maintaining the structural integrity of cell membranes in animals.
Not really, no. Cholesterol's main role is not related to energy storage.
These transport vehicles are called high-density lipoproteins (HDL). HDL picks up excess cholesterol from cells and transports it to the liver where it can be broken down and eliminated from the body. HDL is often referred to as "good cholesterol" because of its role in removing cholesterol from the bloodstream.