What Causes Lysis?
Sometimes, cells get too full or stretched, maybe from too much water inside, and they can’t hold on any longer. Just like if you fill up your water balloon way past its limits, it might pop all by itself.
Or something could push against the outside of the cell, making it burst open. It’s like when you squeeze a balloon too hard, splat! the water comes out everywhere.
What Happens After Lysis?
Once the cell breaks open, everything inside is released. That's like spilling all the water from your balloon onto the ground. In real life, this can help other cells or living things get nutrients or signals from that broken cell. It’s a simple but powerful way for cells to communicate and share stuff!
Examples
- A red blood cell bursts when it's placed in a salty solution because the water rushes out too fast.
- Imagine a balloon that pops when you let all the air out quickly.
Ask a question
See also
- How Does the Human Body Regenerate After Injury?
- What Is the Difference Between Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Cells?
- What are innate immune cells?
- How Life is Organized: Crash Course Biology #4?
- How Does Unicellular and Multicellular Cells Work?