a door
The plasma membrane, also known as the cell membrane, functions similarly to the cell wall by providing structure, protecting the cell, and regulating what enters and exits the cell. It is a phospholipid bilayer that surrounds the cell and maintains its integrity.
You can get this answer by going on a site called mrscienceut.net/CellWebquest.html to help you locate your answer. If this doesn't help sorry
A door is an example of a cell wall. It is a protective wall, provides, and maintains the shape of these cells. They also serve as a protective barrier.
The cell wall creates a semipermeable boundary that keeps the matter of the cell together while also allowing respiration. In animalian organs, the walls not only hold in material(performing the same function) but they are muscular and help the organ work. Above the organ stage, the skin on an animal performs the same function as a cell wall, as does the bark on a tree. They hold the material inside, but are semipermeable to allow exchange of substances.
I believe it produce the same functions as a cell
I believe it performs the same function as a cell.
The plasma membrane, also known as the cell membrane, functions similarly to the cell wall by providing structure, protecting the cell, and regulating what enters and exits the cell. It is a phospholipid bilayer that surrounds the cell and maintains its integrity.
nothing A semipermeable membrane
Nothing
nothing A semipermeable membrane
hello im looking for the same answer it might be something the will produce something because in this case it producs robosomes
the Golgi function the same as the nucleolus
You can get this answer by going on a site called mrscienceut.net/CellWebquest.html to help you locate your answer. If this doesn't help sorry
A door is an example of a cell wall. It is a protective wall, provides, and maintains the shape of these cells. They also serve as a protective barrier.
The cell membrain
The ___________ press performs the same function as a hydraulic press, but at lower pressures.
The cell wall creates a semipermeable boundary that keeps the matter of the cell together while also allowing respiration. In animalian organs, the walls not only hold in material(performing the same function) but they are muscular and help the organ work. Above the organ stage, the skin on an animal performs the same function as a cell wall, as does the bark on a tree. They hold the material inside, but are semipermeable to allow exchange of substances.