The process used by some protists to actively ingest food particles is called Phagocytosis.
An amoeba ingests large food particles by the process of endocytosis.
There are two types of white blood cells: lymphocytes and phagocytes. The latter of the two will ingest pathogens through a process called phagocytizing.
Choanocyte or collar cells is a unique type of porifers which contains a flagellum surrounded at its base by a thin cytoplasmic collar. This cell creates current and ingest food particles from water.
1) Phagocytosis (literally, cell-eating) is the process by which cells ingest large objects, such as bacteria, viruses, or the remnants of cells which have undergone apoptosis. The membrane invaginates enclosing the wanted particles in a pocket, then engulfs the object by pinching it off, and the object is sealed off into a large vacuole known as a phagosome. 2) Pinocytosis (literally, cell-drinking). This process is concerned with the uptake of solutes and single molecules such as proteins. Both phagocytosis and pinocytosis are non-receptor-mediated forms of endocytosis, and may result in the cell engulfing non-specific or unwanted particles. 3) Receptor-mediated endocytosis is a more specific active event where the cytoplasm membrane folds inward to form coated pits. In this case, proteins or other trigger particles lock into receptors/ ligands in the cell's plasma membrane. It is then, and only then that the particles are engulfed. These inward budding vesicles bud to form cytoplasmic vesicles. This process may also result in engulfing of unwanted particles, however not to the extent of pino/phagocytosis.
1) Phagocytosis (literally, cell-eating) is the process by which cells ingest large objects, such as bacteria, viruses, or the remnants of cells which have undergone apoptosis. The membrane invaginates enclosing the wanted particles in a pocket, then engulfs the object by pinching it off, and the object is sealed off into a large vacuole known as a phagosome. 2) Pinocytosis (literally, cell-drinking). This process is concerned with the uptake of solutes and single molecules such as proteins. Both phagocytosis and pinocytosis are non-receptor-mediated forms of endocytosis, and may result in the cell engulfing non-specific or unwanted particles. 3) Receptor-mediated endocytosis is a more specific active event where the cytoplasm membrane folds inward to form coated pits. In this case, proteins or other trigger particles lock into receptors/ ligands in the cell's plasma membrane. It is then, and only then that the particles are engulfed. These inward budding vesicles bud to form cytoplasmic vesicles. This process may also result in engulfing of unwanted particles, however not to the extent of pino/phagocytosis.
The process used by some protists to actively ingest food particles is called Phagocytosis.
The process used by some protists to actively ingest food particles is called Phagocytosis.
An amoeba ingests large food particles by the process of endocytosis.
absorbs the food!
Many single-celled organisms employ endocytosis to ingest food particles. In this process the plasma membrane extends outwards and surrounds the food particle.
The mechanism by which one small, single-celled organism could ingest a smaller single-celled organism is phagocytosis. Phagocytosis is the process of ingesting particles of a cell.
Phagocytosis which literally means "cell eating" is the process by which cells ingest bacteria and other large foreign particles.
Phagocytosis is the process by which cells ingest and destroy bacteria in the body. This process makes up part of the immune function.
Some protists are photosynthetic(like plants),some ingest food(like animals),and some absorb their food(like fungi).
Phagocytosis
If the meat of the human is poisoned, and the poison does not cook out in the cooking process. Then the cannibals that ingest the human would also ingest the poison.
lymphatic system