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cell membrane
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   Also found in: Medical, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.04 sec.

cell membrane

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Typical plant and animal cell. Plant and animal cells share many structures, such as ribosomes, mitochondria, and chromosomes, but they also have notable differences: plant cells have chloroplasts, a large vacuole, and a cellulose cell wall. Animal cells do not have a rigid cell wall but have an outside cell membrane only.

Thin layer of protein and fat surrounding cells that keeps the cells together and controls substances passing between the cytoplasm and the intercellular space. The cell membrane is semipermeable, allowing some substances to pass through and some not. Generally, small molecules such as water, glucose, and amino acids can penetrate the membrane, while large molecules, such as starch, cannot. Substances often cross the membrane by diffusion, a spontaneous passage of molecules. Water movement across the membrane is a special case of diffusion known as osmosis.

Membranes also play a part in active transport, hormonal response (see hormones), and cell metabolism.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
During the secretion process, a sac, or vesicle, containing a cargo of molecules inside a cell moves to the cell's membrane and fuses with it.
The electroinsertion process involves exposing red blood cells to a pulsed electrical field, thereby enabling the CD4 to be incorporated into the red blood cell's membrane to form RBC-CD4 which acts as a sponge absorbing free-floating HIV and forming aggregates with HIV-infected cells.
The membranes of these hollow spheres consist of fatty molecules--lipids--in the same arrangement as that of similar lipids in a living cell's membrane.
 
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