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Three basic parts are nucleus, cytoplasm and cell membrane. Nucleus contain the genetic information of a species (DNA). Cytoplasm has all the cell organelles and molecules. Plasma membrane make the boundary of a cell, that conducts ions and participate in cell signalling.
The substance in which all of the organelles are suspended is called cytoplasm. It fills the space between cell wall/cell membrane. It is technically an organelle, although it does not have a specific function other than to alllow other organelles (like small vacuoles and lysosomes) to move inside the cell.
This area is called the cytoplasm. The cytoplasm houses many cell organelles e.g. mitochondria, ribosomes and lysosomes.
The semifluid substance that fills a cell is cytoplasm.
cell membrane
For a animal cell: nucleus, the ribosomes, Golgi body, lysosomes, endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria, nuclear membrane, vacuoles, cytoplasm, cell membrane, chromosomes. For a plant cell: nucleus, vacuoles, nuclear membrane, cell wall, cell membrane, chloroplast, chromosome, Endoplasmic Reticulum, chloryphyll, cytoplasm, ribsomes, mitochondria.
For a animal cell: nucleus, the ribosomes, Golgi body, lysosomes, endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria, nuclear membrane, vacuoles, cytoplasm, cell membrane, chromosomes. For a plant cell: nucleus, vacuoles, nuclear membrane, cell wall, cell membrane, chloroplast, chromosome, Endoplasmic Reticulum, chloryphyll, cytoplasm, mitochondria, ribsomes.
Three basic parts are nucleus, cytoplasm and cell membrane. Nucleus contain the genetic information of a species (DNA). Cytoplasm has all the cell organelles and molecules. Plasma membrane make the boundary of a cell, that conducts ions and participate in cell signalling.
cytoplasm..yes lysosomes...no In plant cells, the large vacuole acts as the lysosomes by breaking down large molecules into smaller ones. In fact the acids found in lysosomes are actually contained in a plant cell vacuole. ADDED: actually the newest information is that some plants do have hydrolytic enzymes that preform all the functions of lysosomes and all, in reality, lysosomes.
The substance in which all of the organelles are suspended is called cytoplasm. It fills the space between cell wall/cell membrane. It is technically an organelle, although it does not have a specific function other than to alllow other organelles (like small vacuoles and lysosomes) to move inside the cell.
Plasma Membrane- External boundary of the cell- Confines cell contents; regulates entry and exit of materials Lysosomes- Scattered in cytoplasm- Digest ingested materials and worn-out organelles Mitochondrion- Scattered throughout the cell- Control release of energy from food; from ATP Microvilli- Projections of the plasma membrane- Increase the membrane surface area Golgi apparatus- Near the nucleus ( in the cytoplasm )- Packages proteins to be incorporated into the plasma membrane or lysosomes or exported from the cell
This area is called the cytoplasm. The cytoplasm houses many cell organelles e.g. mitochondria, ribosomes and lysosomes.
cell membrane, cytoplasm, lysosomes, golgi apparatus, mitochondria, ribosome, endoplasmic reticulum (ER).
cell membrane, cytoplasm, lysosomes, golgi apparatus, mitochondria, ribosome, endoplasmic reticulum (ER).
No,lysosomes do not do that.It is performed by cell membrane.
nucleus, ribosomes, lysosomes, endoplasmic reticulum (ER), Golgi bodies, cell membrane, cytoplasm, mitochondria,
Some are a nucleus, cell membrane, vacoule, mitochondrion, Golgi apparatus, endoplasmic reticulum, cytoplasm, ribosomes and lysosomes.