Membrane compartments in eukaryotic cells are organelles.
All eukaryotic cells have membrane covered compartments called vesicles. They form when part of the cell membrane of an object pinches off.
All eukaryotic cells have membrane-covered compartments called vesicles that form when part of the cell membrane envelops an object or substance and then pinches off to transport molecules within the cell or to the cell membrane.
Eukaryotic cells.
Organelles. These compartments help to organize the cell's activities and contain specialized structures that perform particular functions within the cell. Examples of organelles include the nucleus, mitochondria, and endoplasmic reticulum.
Eukaryotic cells have membrane-covered compartments that form through a process called endocytosis. This occurs when a portion of the cell membrane surrounds an object, such as a particle or molecule, and pinches off to form a vesicle inside the cell. This vesicle then transports the object into the cell for further processing.
All eukaryotic cells have membrane covered compartments called vesicles. They form when part of the cell membrane of an object pinches off.
Vesicles is the answer
organelles
I think you want organelles as your answer.
The membrane-covered compartment of eukaryotic cells are called vesicles. The vesicles are developed when a part of the membrane nips off.
vesicles
All eukaryotic cells have a membrane covered compartment called the nucleus. The nucleus is the control center of the cell and contains the cells DNA.
Vesicles
Glyco-protein cell coats, as compared to a bacterial cell wall.
All eukaryotic cells have membrane-covered compartments called vesicles that form when part of the cell membrane envelops an object or substance and then pinches off to transport molecules within the cell or to the cell membrane.
Eukaryotic cells.
Its the vesicle/transport vacuole.