00:01
In order to answer this question, we have to complete here these plans with these words that you have here.
00:06
So it's just differences between endocytosis and endocytosis.
00:09
In general, remember that endocytosis is when, for example, you have a molecule here, and you're going to engulf this.
00:17
Like this, your cell membrane is going to become like this, and your molecule is going to become here, this molecule here.
00:22
And then you're going to produce a vesicle that is surrounded by this piece of this membrane, and also the molecule.
00:30
Is going to be within this vehicle here.
00:32
This is endocytosis.
00:34
And this is particularly the opposite.
00:35
It means you're going to move this vesicle towards the plasma membrane and the membrane from this vessel membrane from this vessel membrane and you're going to release the molecule inside a trice.
00:46
So, he says, raise that word or words in each sentence to assess your understanding of endocidosis in exositein.
00:55
The fact here, endocytosis is a way substances can blunt a cell.
00:59
And here, half, can enter a cell.
01:01
So you have this word here.
01:06
During endocytosis, an intracellular blunt forms to take in substances.
01:10
And here you're going to have an intracellular vesicle.
01:15
Now you have endocytosis occurs in several different ways.
01:19
Phagocytosis occurs when substances to be transported into the cell are blank.
01:24
And in case of phagocytosis, the molecule to ergointang is very large like this.
01:28
Okay? this is phagocytosis, for example, pathogens, bacteria like that.
01:32
So here we're going to have a large...