A plant cell can have as many as 15,000 ER in it. Theyre relativley tiny then.
The organelles found in an animal cells (not a plant cell) are a nucleus, centrosome, perioxisome, Golgi apparatus, lysosome, rough endoplasimc reticulum, smooth endoplasmic reticulum, and mitochondria.
it is very small so that the naked eye cant see it
The nucleus, mitochondria, and endoplasmic reticulum are three organelles that plant and animal cells share. The nucleus contains genetic material and controls cell functions, the mitochondria produce energy through cellular respiration, and the endoplasmic reticulum is involved in protein synthesis and transport within the cell.
The nucleus stores genetic material such as DNA in the cell. The endoplasmic reticulum is involved in protein and lipid synthesis. The Golgi apparatus stores, modifies, and packages proteins for transport.
The endoplasmic reticulum plays a big part in the packing and carrying of proteins. Proteins are actually carried along the microfilaments of a cell.
The rough endoplasmic reticulum in a cell city can be compared to a manufacturing factory. Just like how the rough ER is involved in protein synthesis and modification in a cell, the factory processes raw materials and produces finished goods. The ribosomes on the rough ER can be likened to workers on the factory assembly line, actively making products.
A plant cell is 1/100 of a millimeter and a animal cell is 40 times as big
Membrane-bound organelles are mostly found in eukaryotic cells. These organelles include the nucleus, endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, lysosomes, peroxisomes, mitochondria, and chloroplasts (in plant cells). They are enclosed by a lipid bilayer membrane that separates their internal contents from the rest of the cell.
because a plant cell has a big vacuole and an animal cell dosnt
because it big huge like the plant cell
one big vacuole. every plant cell has one big vacuole, unless the cell has a disorder (or mutation)
The contents of a cell are quite vast, and are contained within the cell via a cell membrane/cell wall, depending on whether the cell is an animal, plant or bacterial cell. Within the cell, there are other compartments with their own membranes (much like a small bubble inside a big bubble) that contain other cell components i.e. the mitochondria, Golgi apparatus, lysosomes, nucleus (which contains the DNA), etc.