No. The Golgi Body is an organelle inside a cell.
Well some do but not all.... you would have to look that up. Eukaryotic cells do but prokaryotic cells do not.
The Golgi Apparatus, or Golgi Body, appears in both plant and animal cells. It's function is to receive food from the Endoplasmic Reticulum, package it, and send it to organelles throughout the cell.Yes, both plant and animal cells have Golgi bodies/apparatus
An animal cell is made of a nucleus, a cell membrane, endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondrion, a nucleolus, Golgi bodies, ribosomes, lysosomes, and chromosomes. They are not that different from improved animal cells but different from human cells and improved human cells.
cells
The Golgi Bodies or otherwise known as the Golgi Apparatus is found in cells. The function of it is to basically package or sort proteins and send them either to outside of the cell or for storage within the cell
Golgi bodies, named after the Italian biologist Camillo Golgi, are composed of a stack of about half a dozen sacuoles, whose purpose in the cell are to prepare and store chemical products produced in the cell, and then to secrete these outside the cell. Golgi bodies are formed when small sac like pieces of membrane are pinched away from the cell. In the endoplasmic reticulum, proteins synthesized by ribosomes are sent through the canals of the ER, where they meet up with the Golgi bodies. The proteins are then packaged in vesicles. The membranes of these vesicles are then able to bond with the cell membrane, where their contents are secreted outside the cell. Protiens are not the only material packaged in the Golgi bodies. A portion of materials in the wall of a plant cell are assembled in the Golgi bodies. The number and size of Golgi bodies found in a cell depends on the quantity of chemicals produced in the cell. The more chemicals, the more and larger bodies. For example, a large number of Golgi bodies are found in cells that produce saliva and other materials for digestion.
Blood and lymphatic vessels
Golgi bodies, named after the Italian biologist Camillo Golgi, are composed of a stack of about half a dozen sacuoles, whose purpose in the cell are to prepare and store chemical products produced in the cell, and then to secrete these outside the cell. Golgi bodies are formed when small sac like pieces of membrane are pinched away from the cell. In the endoplasmic reticulum, proteins synthesized by ribosomes are sent through the canals of the ER, where they meet up with the Golgi bodies. The proteins are then packaged in vesicles. The membranes of these vesicles are then able to bond with the cell membrane, where their contents are secreted outside the cell. Protiens are not the only material packaged in the Golgi bodies. A portion of materials in the wall of a plant cell are assembled in the Golgi bodies. The number and size of Golgi bodies found in a cell depends on the quantity of chemicals produced in the cell. The more chemicals, the more and larger bodies. For example, a large number of Golgi bodies are found in cells that produce saliva and other materials for digestion.
golgi bodies help package proteins
it would not have a Golgi complex anymore
Seriously, kid? You can't take the time to look this up in your textbook? Or even wikipedia? Weak sauce. The answer you're looking for is Golgi Bodies.
Cells are of two types Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic .Eukaryotic cells possess a well defined nucleus , E.R. , golgi bodies mitochondria , lysosomes and cytoskeleton .