Bacteria do not contain membrane-bound organelles such as mitochondria or chloroplasts, as eukaryotes do. However, photosynthetic bacteria, such as cyanobacteria, may be filled with tightly packed folds of their outer membrane. The effect of these membranes is to increase the potential surface area on which photosynthesis can take place.
No, it doesn't, and it doesn't have Golgi apparatus either.
Bacteria in general lack membrane-bound organelles and nuclei.
There are no eukaryote bacteria! All bacteria are prokaryote; not nucleus and no membrane bound organelles.
Yeast do not have membrane bound organelles.
Membrane bound organelles, they have bilipid membranes surrounding them just like the cell does.ÊThese would include the nucleus, mitochondria etc, non-membrane bound organelles do not.
membrane bound organelles
C. Plants...
Basically because bacteria are prokaryote and protozoa ( protists ) are eukaryote. Prokaryote cells are simple cell of no nucleus or membrane bound organelles. Eukaryote cells have their genetic material in a membrane bound nucleus and have many membrane bound organelles.
No, it doesn't, and it doesn't have Golgi apparatus either.
Bacteria in general lack membrane-bound organelles and nuclei.
There are no eukaryote bacteria! All bacteria are prokaryote; not nucleus and no membrane bound organelles.
Yes. Mitochondria are membrane-bound organelles. Animal and plant cells are eukaryotes (that is, they contain membrane bound organelles). Only prokaryotes (which are mostly bacteria and don't contain membrane bound organelles) don't have mitochondria.
No bacterial cell has a nuclear membrane. A bacteria is defined by not having any membrane-bound organelles.
Yes, all bacteria are prokaryotes because they do not have a nucleus or membrane bound organelles.
This is a bacillus bacteria.
prokaryotic
Yeast do not have membrane bound organelles.