In eukaryotic cells, everything is compartmentalized - most reactions take place contained within an organelle. This is true for enzymes. The hydrolytic enzymes that could damage the membranes are not free-floating; they are contained in lysosomes. Even when they're active, they are not released or "come out" of the vesicle. Whatever needs hydrolyzing comes in instead. For example, food vacuoles will fuse with the lysosome, and the nutrients will come into contact with the enzymes within the contained space.
the situation is unstable please come quick over and out.
They generally come from living organisms, hence their classification as 'organic catalysts'. For example, many enzymes are secreted by the pancreas in humans, and most organisms; animal, plant, bacteria, fungis or others, have lysosomes within their body cells (small membrane bound packages that 'eat' and 'digest' wastes) which contain numerous enzymes to break down wastes and toxins quickly.
The liver and the pancreas
Lysosomes are organelles that get rid of wastes in the cell like old cell parts, food wastes, foreign invaders. Lysosomes are found in eukaryotic cells. They are basically vesicles that holds enzymes created by the rough endoplasmic reticulum of the cell.
otherwise they would come out the same as they were when you ate them.
Yes. The pancreas is a digestive organ in the abdomen that lies just below the stomach. Its primary job is to produce enzymes required for the digestion and absorption of food. Enzymes secreted include lipases that digest fat, proteases which digest proteins, and amylases which digest starch molecules.
The acrosome layer of sperm cells contain enzymes to break down the outer layer of the ovum to allow penetration by the sperm cell.
The lysosomes contains digestive enzymes that help clean up the cell. It also helps in breaking down the complex compounds that come into the cell.
vacuoles basically have the same functions as vesicles therefore, in plant cells, when lysosomes are fused with the vacuole, the contents within the vacuole are digested by lysosomes' hydrolytic enzymes into the simpler subunits. Remember that vacuoles not only store H2O, sugar and salt, but also pigments and toxic molecules. The digested contents are now simpler molecules that are released into the cytoplasm. Also, normal rejuvination occurs when parts of a cell are digested within its own lysosomes (autodigestion).
The Golgi Apparatus aka Golgi Complex produces lysozomes which will combine with it and digest them. If you are wondering what a Golgi Apparatus is then it is basically a "warehouse" to store and export proteins. The proteins come from the ribosomes which creates them.
Cis and trans refers to the different faces of a Golgi complex. Vesicles come into the cis face from the ER and leave from the trans face to the plasma membrane or Lysosomes.
lysosomes