answersLogoWhite

0

What are 4 parts of the cell?

User Avatar

Anonymous

15y ago
Updated: 8/17/2019

golgi apparatus

vacuole

endoplasmic reticulum

mitochondria

nucleus

nucleolus

ribosomes

User Avatar

Wiki User

15y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

What is the 4 parts of a hyphae?

cytoplasm, vacuole, nuclei and cell wall


How do you use cell parts in a sentence?

I labeled all the cell parts in my drawing.Drawing the cell parts, I understood plant cells better.Once I understood cell parts, I wanted to be a scientist.


What are the 4 parts of the cell cycle?

The four parts of the cell cycle are G1 phase (cell growth), S phase (DNA replication), G2 phase (more cell growth), and M phase (mitosis or cell division).


How many total parts do the animal and the plant cell have?

An animal cell has seven parts: 1.Cell Membrane 2.Cytoplasm 3.Mitochondria 4.Nucleus 5.Nuclear Membrane 6.Ribosomes


What do you a cell dividing into 4 parts?

If a cell divides into 4 parts, it undergoes a process called tetrad formation or tetrasporic division. This typically occurs during meiosis in some organisms, resulting in the formation of four haploid cells with half the genetic material of the parent cell.


What do you call cell parts?

I think there called cell parts


What is the name given to all the cell parts?

In the human body they are 4 different types of cells


What are some parts of the plant cell had found in animals cell and parts of animal cell not found in plant cell?

Cell wall :))


Which cell parts holds the instructions for making all of the cell parts?

The nucleus holds the instructions for making all the cell parts.


Enumerate the parts of the cell and gives its functions?

Enumerate the parts of the cell


What are all of the cell parts called?

Cell parts are called organelles.


What is the process called when a cell divides into 2 parts then 4 parts?

The process is called cytokinesis, which involves the division of the cytoplasm and organelles after cell division (mitosis) to create two separate daughter cells. If the initial cell divides into four parts through repeated rounds of cell division, then each of the resulting daughter cells would undergo cytokinesis as well.