Vesicle
A lysosome can fuse with various cellular components, such as endosomes, phagosomes, or autophagosomes, to either degrade their contents or to transfer materials for recycling. This fusion process allows lysosomes to participate in essential cellular functions, such as waste disposal, nutrient recycling, and pathogen destruction.
Vacuoles store things, so it would make sense that food vacuoles store food. Lysosomes digest things into smaller usable materials (or destroy them) so lysosomes will attach to food vacuoles so they can efficiently digest food. The vacuole to store the food waiting to be digested by the lysosome.
Lysosomes fuse with the food vacuole to digest its contents. Lysosomes contain enzymes that break down macromolecules such as proteins, carbohydrates, and lipids into smaller molecules that can be used by the cell for energy or building materials. This process is known as intracellular digestion.
Worn-out organelles are broken down by a process called autophagy. Autophagy involves the formation of a double-membraned vesicle called an autophagosome that engulfs the organelle and fuses with a lysosome, where the organelle is degraded by enzymes.
The lysosome fuses with a vesicle for the purpose of digestion within the cell. Lysosomes contain enzymes that break down molecules into smaller components that can be used by the cell for energy or recycled for other processes.
An exocytotic vesicle is a membrane bound vesicle containing contents intended for release into the external environment. The vesicle will ultimately be fused with the cell membrane when its contents are released.
Once a vesicle enters the cell through endocytosis, it fuses with a lysosome containing hydrolytic enzymes. The enzymes break down the membrane of the vesicle and its contents, releasing the molecules into the cytoplasm for further processing and utilization by the cell.
Which sentence best describes exocytosis? A. a vesicle fuses to a lysosome and its contents are destroyed B. a vesicle fuses to the cell membrane and its contents enter the cell C. a vesicle fuses to the cell membrane and its contents leave the cell D. a vesicle fuses to the nuclear envelope and its contents enter the nucleus? Exocytosis is the durable, energy-consuming process by which a cell directs the contents of secretory vesicles out of the cell membrane into the extracellular space.
The cell membrane fuses with the membrane package in exocytosis.
The vesicle fuses with the cell membrane, releasing it's contents.
osmosis
The cell membrane fuses with the membrane package in exocytosis.