Yes they have ribosomes in them.They have 80s ribosomes.
no
YES!!!
yes
The ribosomes. There are many ribosomes within an animal cell.
Ribosomes
The cell organelles that make protein are the ribosomes. There are two types of ribosomes: free ribosomes and bound ribosomes.
ribosomes
Prokaryotic ribosomes are single celled ribosomes and eukryotic ribosomes are multi cellular ribosomes
They are found in all the kingdoms. 1. KINGDOM: MONERA (prokaryotic organisms) 2. KINGDOM: PROTISTA (primitive eukaryotic organisms) 3. KINGDOM: MYCOTA (exclusively fungi) 4. KINGDOM: METAPHYTA (advanced eukaryotic plants) 5. KINGDOM: METAZOA (all multicellular animals)
Yes! Ribosomes occur in the cytoplasm of all cells, prokaryotic ( the cells of bacteria) and eukaryotic (cells of animals, plants, and fungi). They occur in mitochondria and chloroplasts, too. The ribosomes of prokaryotic cells are distinctly smaller than those in eukaryotes. Interestingly, the ribosomes in mitochondria and chloroplasts are similar in size to those of prokaryotes, and this is just one of the items of evidence that support the theory that these two organelles evolved from free-living prokaryotic ancestors.
c. a cell wall
Ribosomes
The ribosomes. There are many ribosomes within an animal cell.
Ribosomes
The cell organelles that make protein are the ribosomes. There are two types of ribosomes: free ribosomes and bound ribosomes.
ribosomes
Ribosomes
Ribosomes are the organelles that read coded genetic messages. Ribosomes can be found in all living cells.
Prokaryotic ribosomes are single celled ribosomes and eukryotic ribosomes are multi cellular ribosomes
Fungi are closer to plant cells because they both have these organelles: Cell wall, cell membrane, nucleus, cytoplasm, mitochondria, ribosomes, endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi bodies, lysosomes, and vacuoles. The only difference between then is that plant cells have chloroplasts, and fungi do not.