IT depends on what cell. In the plant cell it is the cell wall and the cell membrane. But in the animal cell it is only the cell membrane.
The cell membrane controls selective permeability. Larger substances can enter the cell through endocytosis and exit through exocytosis.
The cell membrane
I think you are talking about the nucleus, which is the "brain" of the cell. It controls everything that cell does.
Phospholipids permit lipid-soluble materials to easily enter or leave the cell by diffusion through the cell membrane. Phospholipids form a bilayer or double layer which makes up most of the membrane.
Plasma membrane filters what the cell needs and keeps out what will harm it. this property is called selective permeability.
The cell membrane is the barrier that controls what substances enter and leave a cell.
The cell membrane controls what substances enter and leave the cell and at what rate it also separates the inside of the cell from its surroundings keeping the contense of the cell together and concentration gradients in place and don't forget it also contains receptors which allow messages to be convayed to cells.
The cell membrane controls what substances enter or leave the cell. It is a selectively permeable barrier that allows certain molecules to pass through while blocking others. This regulation helps maintain the internal environment of the cell.
cell membrane
the 3 parts of a cell are : 1 Nucleus- this controls what happens inside the cell . 2 Cell Membrane - this controls what substances enter and leave the cell 3 Cytoplasm - this is where the chemial processes occur
The cell membrane. It is described as semipermeable
The selective permeability, also called semi-permeability, of the membrane controls which substances cant enter and exit the cell.
The cell membrane controls which substances can and cannot enter a cell.
selective permeability
selective permeability
selective permeability
The cell membrane.