Nnice attemptu, but the correct answer is exocytosis. The prefix should have been an indicator. Pinocytosis: A process of taking in fluidtogether with its contents into the cell by forming narrow channels through its membrane that pinch off into vesicles, and fuse with lysosomes that hydrolyze or break down contents. Exocytosis is when materials leave the cell by the membrane "spitting it out". Endocytosis is the transport of larger matters into or out of the cell.
The process is called endocytosis, which involves the cell engulfing a substance by forming a vesicle around it. There are different types of endocytosis such as phagocytosis (engulfing solid particles) and pinocytosis (uptaking liquid substances).
endocytosis.
This process is called endocytosis. It involves the formation of a vesicle from the cell membrane to engulf molecules and bring them into the cell. Endocytosis can occur through various mechanisms such as phagocytosis, pinocytosis, and receptor-mediated endocytosis.
Transcytosis is a cellular process that combines both exocytosis and endocytosis. It involves the uptake of molecules into the cell through endocytosis, their transport across the cell, and then the release of these molecules through exocytosis on the opposite side of the cell.
The process is called endocytosis, specifically phagocytosis if the large substance is solid or pinocytosis if it is liquid. The plasma membrane engulfs the substance, forming a vesicle, and brings it into the cell.
Which organelles are involved in the process called endocytosis?
The process is called phagocytosis, which means "cell eating".
The process is called endocytosis, which involves the cell engulfing a substance by forming a vesicle around it. There are different types of endocytosis such as phagocytosis (engulfing solid particles) and pinocytosis (uptaking liquid substances).
endocytosis.
This process is called endocytosis. It involves the formation of a vesicle from the cell membrane to engulf molecules and bring them into the cell. Endocytosis can occur through various mechanisms such as phagocytosis, pinocytosis, and receptor-mediated endocytosis.
endocytosis
endocytosis
The process is called receptor-mediated endocytosis. It involves the binding of large molecules to specific receptors on the cell membrane, triggering the formation of vesicles that engulf the molecules and transport them into the cell. This process is important for nutrient uptake and cell signaling.
The process you are referring to is called endocytosis. In endocytosis, the cell membrane surrounds and engulfs particles or fluids from outside the cell, forming a vesicle that brings the material into the cell. This allows the cell to take in nutrients, remove waste, or internalize signaling molecules.
Transcytosis is a cellular process that combines both exocytosis and endocytosis. It involves the uptake of molecules into the cell through endocytosis, their transport across the cell, and then the release of these molecules through exocytosis on the opposite side of the cell.
This would probably be phagocytosis.
The process is called endocytosis, specifically phagocytosis if the large substance is solid or pinocytosis if it is liquid. The plasma membrane engulfs the substance, forming a vesicle, and brings it into the cell.