By a process called active transport, or endocytosis. There is phagocytosis for particles and pinocytosis for liquids. In both cases, the cell membrane, also called the phospholipid bilayer, engulfs the particle or liquid and then brings in into the cell where lysosomes use digestive enzymes to break it down.
Facilitated diffusion is the process by which transport proteins help large molecules like glucose cross the cell membrane. These proteins create a channel or carrier mechanism that allows the molecule to move across the membrane along its concentration gradient.
Large molecules such as glucose that cannot cross the phospholipid bilayer can still move across the membrane through transport proteins by active transport. Active transport uses energy to move molecules the bilayer.
This is correct. Glucose, being a large molecule, requires a protein channel called a glucose transporter to facilitate its passage through the cell membrane. Glucose transporters assist in transporting glucose molecules across the hydrophobic lipid bilayer of the cell membrane.
Large polar molecules pass through the membrane by using specific transport proteins that facilitate their movement across the lipid bilayer.
large molecules and charged molecules move across a cell membrane through "facilitated diffusion." That is to say, a transport protein in the plasma membrane of the cell is used (with the aid of adenosine triphosphate, or ATP) to move the substance from one side of the membrane to the other.This method is actually the basis upon which all cell function is based, from generating and using energy, to keeping the cell isotonic to its environment.
Large or polar molecules, such as glucose or ions, typically require assistance to cross the cell membrane. This assistance can come in the form of transport proteins like channel proteins or carrier proteins that facilitate the movement of these molecules across the membrane.
Facilitated diffusion is the process by which transport proteins help large molecules like glucose cross the cell membrane. These proteins create a channel or carrier mechanism that allows the molecule to move across the membrane along its concentration gradient.
Large molecules, such as glucose, are not able to pass through the cell membrane. Therefore proteins are needed to transport them across.
Large polar molecules like glucose and ions such as sodium and potassium are not permeable through the cell membrane. These molecules require specific transport proteins or channels to facilitate their movement across the membrane.
Large molecules such as proteins are typically unable to move across the membrane during osmosis. One example is starch molecules, which are too large to pass through the membrane pores.
Large molecules such as glucose that cannot cross the phospholipid bilayer can still move across the membrane through transport proteins by active transport. Active transport uses energy to move molecules the bilayer.
In general, molecules that cannot diffuse across the cell membrane are either very large, such as starches and fats, or very polar.
Molecules that are large, polar, or charged generally do not pass easily through the plasma membrane. These types of molecules require transport proteins to facilitate their movement across the membrane. Examples include glucose, ions, and water.
Large polar molecules such as proteins and glucose, as well as ions like sodium and potassium, will not diffuse directly across the lipid bilayer due to their size or charge. These molecules require specific transport proteins or channels to facilitate their movement across the membrane.
In osmosis, large molecules like proteins and polysaccharides do not move across the membrane. Only smaller molecules such as water and ions can pass through the membrane during osmosis.
Large molecules such as proteins, polysaccharides, and nucleic acids are generally unable to pass through the plasma membrane without assistance from transport proteins or other mechanisms. The size and charge of these molecules prevent them from diffusing across the membrane's hydrophobic interior.
This is correct. Glucose, being a large molecule, requires a protein channel called a glucose transporter to facilitate its passage through the cell membrane. Glucose transporters assist in transporting glucose molecules across the hydrophobic lipid bilayer of the cell membrane.