Cheek cells usually have a vacuole. The cheek cells are part of the human cells and are therefore classified as animal cells which usually have vacuoles.
No, the kid in our biology class, that is saying that they do, is wrong. LOL! Nope, they don't. Cells, in general, have vacuoles of many descriptions, few are large. However, when we consider the amount of saliva produced in BOTH the static and the On-Demand basis, cheek cells have an 'unusually, expressly' LARGE Golgi apparatus. Hope this helps.
The cytoplasm of a cheek cell is located within the cell membrane, surrounding the nucleus. It contains various organelles such as mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum, and ribosomes, which help in cell functioning.
they both have vacuoles. plant cells have bigger vacuoles then animal cells
Plant cells
animal cells have either very small vacuoles, or no vacuoles at all, whereas plant cells have very large vacuoles.
animal cells have either very small vacuoles, or no vacuoles at all, whereas plant cells have very large vacuoles.
Only eukaryotic cells have vacuoles, prokaryotic cells dont have them
All plant cells have vacuoles. Most fungal cells have vacuoles. Animals cells have lysosomes instead of vacuoles. Some animal cells may have a vacuole-like structure that stores water or gases, but these are not true vacuoles.
They both have nucleoli you have to dye them both and of course they are both living cells but not the same kind. Both have cell membranes and are eukaryotic cells.
Yes. Animal cells have small vacuoles. Plant cells are the ones with a big vacuole. Animal cells also have two or three vacuoles while plant cells have one. But, plant cells, animal cells, and vacuoles are microscopic, if that's what you mean.
Yes, animal cells do contain vacuoles, smaller than those found in plant cells but greater in number. Some animal cells do not however, have any vacuoles.
Yes, animal cells have vacuoles, but they are typically smaller and less prominent than vacuoles in plant cells. Animal cell vacuoles serve various functions such as storage of water, ions, and waste materials.