Both Vesicles and Lysosomes transport material in and out of the cell.
Large vesicles are membrane-bound organelles found in cells that play a role in storage, transport, or excretion of cellular materials. They are larger than typical transport vesicles and can vary in size and function depending on the cell type. Large vesicles are involved in processes such as vacuole formation, endocytosis, and exocytosis.
They are called lysosomes. Lysosomes are membrane-bound vesicles filled with enzymes that help digest large molecules into smaller components. These enzymes work best in the acidic environment inside the lysosome.
Im not sure if this is the exact answer your looking for but its a right answer. lysosomes get rid of organelles that are not working or not working to their potential
Vacuoles and vesicles aid in storage, transportation, and digestion within cells. Vacuoles are large membrane-bound organelles that store water, nutrients, and waste products. Vesicles are smaller membrane-bound sacs that transport molecules within the cell or to the cell membrane for secretion.
Exocytosis
Large vesicles are membrane-bound organelles found in cells that play a role in storage, transport, or excretion of cellular materials. They are larger than typical transport vesicles and can vary in size and function depending on the cell type. Large vesicles are involved in processes such as vacuole formation, endocytosis, and exocytosis.
vacuole(:
How does collecting a large amount helps scientists
vesicles because the rest are all part of prophase.
A Vacuole!
They are called lysosomes. Lysosomes are membrane-bound vesicles filled with enzymes that help digest large molecules into smaller components. These enzymes work best in the acidic environment inside the lysosome.
Im not sure if this is the exact answer your looking for but its a right answer. lysosomes get rid of organelles that are not working or not working to their potential
Vacuoles and vesicles aid in storage, transportation, and digestion within cells. Vacuoles are large membrane-bound organelles that store water, nutrients, and waste products. Vesicles are smaller membrane-bound sacs that transport molecules within the cell or to the cell membrane for secretion.
Exocytosis
Anything that is a large bulbous sack... the best bet would be the gall badder.
The process that describes the ATP-requiring movement of extremely large substances out of a cell in pockets called vesicles is known as exocytosis. During exocytosis, vesicles containing the substances fuse with the cell membrane, releasing their contents into the extracellular space. This mechanism is crucial for processes such as neurotransmitter release and the secretion of hormones.
Scientists can learn a large amount of information about light from rainbows.