No...its a jelly like fluid that controls all movement of the cell.
well in general, a bacterium cell will contain much the same material that a human cell will contain. it will have genetic material, (RNA DNA) proteins, cytoplasm ribosomes, and other organells
No. Cytoplasm is the fluid within a cell. Therefore, sperm does contain cytoplasm, but cytoplasm cannot contain sperm.
while bacterial cell does have a cell wall and a cell membrane, it does not contain a nucleus. the bacteria cell's genetic material, which looks like a thick, tangled a tring, is found in the cytoplasm
The cell membrane - without which cytoplasm is meaningless - serves to contain cytoplasm just as a wall would contain a city.
No, a nucleus does not contain cytoplasm. Cytoplasm is the gel-like substance outside the nucleus in a cell and contains various organelles and molecules, while the nucleus contains the cell's genetic material in the form of DNA.
Prokaryotic cells have ribosomes, plasmids, cytoplasm, plasma membrane, cell wall, and a nucleoid. They do not have a membrane-bound nucleus like Eukaryotes do.
Cytoplasm
Nuclei are the central part of a cell that contain genetic material, such as DNA, and regulate cell functions. Eosinophilic cytoplasm refers to the pink staining of the cell's cytoplasm under certain laboratory techniques, indicating the presence of specific proteins or structures within the cell.
A cells' cytoplasm is for it to contain all the organelles in the cell. Most cell activities occur here.
Cytoplasm
Cytoplasm.
Yes.