Almost all cells of the human body have organelles, including muscle cells. A lot of energy, in the form of ATP, is required to make movement occur in the muscles and this can only be produced from the complete oxidation of carbohydrates to CO2 and Water. To completely oxidise carbohydrates an organelle called Mitochondria is requires and so muscle cells hace many many of these.
Yes. Like all animal cells, muscle cells contain lysosomes. They are needed for the breakdown of any waste materials, and since muscle cells are one of the most, if not the most, active sites when it comes to anabolic processes; the lysosomes are essential for breaking down those waste products.
yes, since they have mitochondria in there as well
Yes, all eukaryotic cells have a nucleus.
All cells have cytoplasm
mitochondria
Yes. We have different types of cells, such as blood, skin, muscle cells, etc. But we all have the same organelles in our cells
in a cell, all organelles are present, maybe you need to specify your question
Likely mitochondria as muscles cells require more energy to do work
Eukaryotic cells have organelles.
Organelles are found in the cytoplasm of cells.
Animal cells use organelles (so do plant cells). Cells with organelles are called "eukaryotic" which means these are cells that have a nucleus (which is one of the organelles).
Organelles are found in the cytoplasm of cells.
yes animal cells and plant cells do have organelles
Plant cells have certain specialized organelles that animal cells do not need. These organelles are the cell wall and chloroplasts.
Yes, the amount of organelles will differ in cells depending on their function. For example, muscle cells will have more mitochondria to provide more energy. Some organelles will just be larger; for example, the smooth ER is responsible for detoxification. There will only be one smooth ER unit in every cell, but cells involved in detox like liver cells will have a larger smooth ER.
Eukaryotic cells contain organelles that are enclosed in membranes