Cytoskeleton
Cell walls of plants and algae are made of cellulose. Cellulose is a structural polysaccharide that provides rigidity and support to the cell walls, allowing the cells to maintain their shape and protect the cell interior.
Plants, algae, fungi and bacteria all have cell walls. Animal cells do not have cell walls. Plants have cell walls made of cellulose, hemicellulose and pectin. In true fungi they are usually made of chitin, in algae they are made of a polysaccharide (like cellulose) or a glycoprotein, and bacteria have a peptidoglycan wall.
No, not all plants have cell walls. Plants belonging to the group known as algae, specifically green algae and red algae, may have cell walls made of different materials such as cellulose or agar, or they may have no cell walls at all.
Yes, however, algae lack a vascular system that makes most plants tall, upright, and rigid.
Plant cells are cells found in all plants.
Only plant cells have: -chloroplasts (for photosynthesis) -cell walls (gives them their rigid structure)
Plant cell walls are composed of cellulose, while fungal cells walls are composed of chitin. Both are long-chain starches comprised of many glucose subunits.
the cell wall is around the inside of a plant cell. hope i helped :D
Plants are multicellular, bacterias are unicellular.Plant cells have cell walls made from cellulose. Bacterias have cell walls made of peptidoglycan.
It is called the cell wall.
Variety of glycoproteins The cell walls of plants and algae are made up of cellulose (a complex carbohydrate).
Cells are the basic units of life. Bacteria, algae, plants, and animals are all made up of cells, which are the smallest structural and functional units of living organisms. Each type of organism is made up of specialized cells that perform specific functions necessary for life.