Biology, asked by harrypotteroi, 11 months ago

who explained the structure of plasma membrane explain the structure of plasma membrane with the help of a well labelled diagram​

Answers

Answered by mauryadhruvarvi1
1

Answer:

Explanation:

Introduction

Each cell of your body is encased in a tiny bubble of membrane. This membrane has about the consistency of...salad oil^1  

1

start superscript, 1, end superscript. The first time I read that factoid, I didn't find it very reassuring! Salad oil seems like an awfully fragile boundary to place between a cell and the rest of the world. Luckily, the plasma membrane turns out to be very well-suited to its job, salad oil texture and all.

What exactly is its job? The plasma membrane not only defines the borders of the cell, but also allows the cell to interact with its environment in a controlled way. Cells must be able to exclude, take in, and excrete various substances, all in specific amounts. In addition, they must able to communicate with other cells, identifying themselves and sharing information.

To perform these roles, the plasma membrane needs lipids, which make a semi-permeable barrier between the cell and its environment. It also needs proteins, which are involved in cross-membrane transport and cell communication, and carbohydrates (sugars and sugar chains), which decorate both the proteins and lipids and help cells recognize each other.


harrypotteroi: thanks a lot
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