No. Ribosomes are not cells at all, but are organelles within cells that help to make proteins for the cell.
The ribosomes in bacterial cells do the same job as ribosomes in human and animal cells; they are "sites of translation (protein synthesis)".
Cancer cells are fast multiplying cells. Ribosomes help in cellular reproduction. Hence Cancer cells have ribosomes to assist them in multiplying. Hope this helps!
The ribosomes are the site of protein synthesis.
Ribosomes are the sites of protein synthesis.
ribosomes
organelles
Cells are not found in ribosomes. Ribosomes are found in (eukaryotic) cells.
The ribosomes in bacterial cells do the same job as ribosomes in human and animal cells; they are "sites of translation (protein synthesis)".
The function of the ribosomes in cells is to make proteins. Ribosomes are made up of proteins and RNA.
Ribosomes are in both plant and animal cells.
The terms eukaryotic and prokaryotic only apply to cells - ribosomes themselves aren't cells. Ribosomes are parts of cells, which can be either prokaryotic or eukaryotic.
Cancer cells are fast multiplying cells. Ribosomes help in cellular reproduction. Hence Cancer cells have ribosomes to assist them in multiplying. Hope this helps!
Ribosomes are organelles. All cells have ribosomes.
they are specialized for protein synthesis or producing protein
Ribosomes are small organelles that can be found inside a prokaryotic cell.
The ribosomes are the site of protein synthesis.
All living cells have ribosomes. The ribosomes are the " workbench " upon which proteins are synthesized. The ribosome has catabolic RNA to aid in this task and without ribosomes I can not see proteins being made, so ribosomes are vital to all living cells.