no, they do not
Lysoosmes are in eukariyotes only.They are absent in prokariyotes
no they do not
lyse=to break lysosome is an enzyme present in white blood cells or in leucocytes which break the cell wall of bacteria
Bacteria are prokariyotic oragnisms.They do not have lysosomes.
because the lysosome cannot release its contents unless nearby cells allow it.
lysosome
Lysosome
They are found in both animal cells and plant cells. The animal cell is smaller than the lysosome in the plant cell.
lyse=to break lysosome is an enzyme present in white blood cells or in leucocytes which break the cell wall of bacteria
Some plant cells do have lysosome, while others don't. Lysosome is mostly found in animal cells and hold enzymes which are created by cells.
Bacteria are prokariyotic oragnisms.They do not have lysosomes.
lysosome
Lysosome
I believe the answer you are looking for is lysosomes. Lysosomes are common in animal cells, but not so much in plants, and they contain hydrolytic enzymes that aid in intracellular digestion. Basically, when white blood cells eat bacteria, lysomes are released onto the bacteria, which kills them (and breaks them down.) The process is called necrotic cell death.
lysosome
Anywhere within the cells
Eukariyotic cells have lysosomes.Animals cells have many.
They are in both cells. But there are many in animal cells.
Lysosome are cellular organelles found in animal cells. Lysosomes hold specialized enzymes that help body digest food, fight bacteria, remove waste and unwanted cells.