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membrane
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   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.

membrane

In living things, a continuous layer, made up principally of fat molecules, that encloses a cell or organelles within a cell. Small molecules, such as water and sugars, can pass through the cell membrane by diffusion. Large molecules, such as proteins, are transported across the membrane via special channels, a process often involving energy input. The Golgi apparatus within the cell is thought to produce certain membranes.

In cell organelles, enzymes may be attached to the membrane at specific positions, often alongside other enzymes involved in the same process, like workers at a conveyor belt. Thus membranes help to make cellular processes more efficient.



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enteritidis is not often deposited inside the nutrient-rich yolks of naturally contaminated eggs, penetration by the bacteria through the vitelline membrane into the yolk could result in a rapid increase in bacterial levels.
Degeneration of the vitelline membrane was evident at all treatment levels; severity was dose-related and greater in the outer vitelline membrane than the inner vitelline membrane.
20-26) The high resistance at blastula stage to physico chemical stress, enhanced in free living embryos by protective barriers like the vitelline membrane and jelly coats, provide support for the argument that its reflects very aggressive environmental conditions during the evolution of early multicellular organisms.
 
 
 
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