Yes.
animals-cell membranes, cytoskeletons, nucleus, ribosomes, the endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondrion, vesicles and the golgi complex plants-cell walls, cell membranes, cytoskeletons, nucleus, ribosomes, the endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondrion, vesicles, the golgi complex, and chloroplasts
No, cytoskeletons are made of protein filaments
Yes, some prokaryotes have cytoskeletons, although they are simpler in structure compared to eukaryotic cytoskeletons. Prokaryotic cytoskeletons are involved in maintaining cell shape, cell division, and intracellular transport. Examples of proteins that play a role in prokaryotic cytoskeletons include FtsZ, MreB, and Crescentin.
The three different kinds of cytoskeletons are: * Microtubules * microfilaments * intermediate filaments
It depends, are you talking about a eukaryotic cell or prokaryotic? Eukaryotes include almost all plants and animals. They have a nucleus, mitochondria, lysosomes, cytoskeletons, ribosomes, an endoplasmic reticulum, a Golgi body, vacuoles and in plants, chloroplasts. Prokaryotes have DNA that floats in the cell and ribosomes. That's pretty much it.
Plants feed animals, animals fertilize plants.
It determines the shape of the cell.
mostly cytoskeletons and ectoplasm
plants: sunlight for photosynthesis animals: plants, other animals
cy·to·skel·e·tonn.The internal framework of a cell, composed largely of actin filaments and microtubules.Source: http://www.answers.com/cytoskeletons?cat=technology&gwp=11&method=3&ver=2.3.0.609
Plants evolved before animals.
Animals get most of their energy and nutrition from plants. Animals either eat the plants, or eat animals that ate the plants. Also, it gives animals a place to live. Such as Spiders, ants, moles, and other animals. Plants also provide animals oxygen.