if the cell is of plant origin: as water will enter it, the size of its vacuole will increase pushing the cellular contents against the cell wall, the cell wall in turn exerts an opposite pressure to prevent the entry of more water. In this state the cell is known to become turgid.
if the cell is of animal origin: as it has no cell wall it will burst throwing all the cellular contents out.
The pressure inside a cell that is placed in a hypertonic solution will decrease causing the cell to shrivel due to water loss
If a bacterial cell is placed in water by osmosis, water will move into the cell due to a lower concentration of solutes inside compared to the outside environment. This influx of water can cause the cell to swell and potentially burst if the cell wall is not strong enough to withstand the pressure, a process known as osmotic lysis.
When a cell is placed in a hypertonic solution, water will move out of the cell through osmosis, causing the cell to shrink or shrivel up. This is because the concentration of solutes outside the cell is higher than inside, creating a concentration gradient that drives water out of the cell.
Frog. In 1952, the nucleus of a frog embryo was placed into a donor cell by Robert Briggs and Thomas J. King, pioneering a technique that laid the foundation for modern cloning methods.
When cells are placed in a higher concentration of water (a hypotonic solution), water will move into the cell through osmosis, causing the cell to swell and potentially burst (lyse). This can disrupt the cell's internal environment and lead to cell damage or death.
It is found in the nucleus. the nucleus is the brain of the cell
it dies
it dies
Hypotonic Solution
If a cell is placed in salt water, water leaves the cell by osmosis.
If a cell is placed in salt water, water leaves the cell by osmosis.
the cell would die
The pressure inside a cell that is placed in a hypertonic solution will decrease causing the cell to shrivel due to water loss
The cell would lose water and the membrane would collapse.
When a plant cell is placed in an hypotonic solution it becomes swollen and hard. The cell takes in water by osmosis and starts to swell, but the cell wall prevents it from bursting.
If a bacterial cell is placed in water by osmosis, water will move into the cell due to a lower concentration of solutes inside compared to the outside environment. This influx of water can cause the cell to swell and potentially burst if the cell wall is not strong enough to withstand the pressure, a process known as osmotic lysis.
Golgi complex are placed outside the nucleus in the cytoplasm of the cell.