They are found in plant, animal, eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells.
There are no centrosome in plant or animal cells. If you mean lysomes they break down food and diegust waste
both do.... i think
No, this is only in one cell and it is Animal cells.
The centrosome in animal cells typically contains a pair of centrioles, while plant cells do not have centrioles in their centrosomes. Additionally, plant cells have structures called microtubule organizing centers (MTOCs) that serve similar functions to centrosomes in animal cells.
In plant cells, the microtubules of the spindle originate from the microtubule-organizing centers (MTOCs) located at opposite poles of the cell. In animal cells, the microtubules of the spindle originate from the centrosomes, which are also located at opposite poles of the cell.
Chloroplast and the Cell wall and big vacuole
Both
A car does not have a centrosome. The centrosome is a cellular organelle found in animal cells and is involved in cell division. Cars do not have cells, organelles, or undergo cell division.
A centriole is a barrel-shaped organelle found in most animal eukaryotic cells.
Animal cells have lysosomes, which are organelles that digest waste materials and cellular debris. Plant cells lack lysosomes but have other unique organelles such as chloroplasts, which are responsible for photosynthesis.
The centrosomes, which contain the centrioles in animal cells, not plant cells.
The organelles found in an animal cells (not a plant cell) are a nucleus, centrosome, perioxisome, Golgi apparatus, lysosome, rough endoplasimc reticulum, smooth endoplasmic reticulum, and mitochondria.