Flagella, Cilia. and Microtubules / Microfilaments
microvilli, cilia, and flagella
Flagella, mitochondria, and lysosomes.
1. Nucleus. The main difference is that eukaryotic cells have a nucleus and prokaryotic cells do not. That is really the meaning of the words prokaryotic (before nucleus) and eukaryotic (true nucleus). 2. Organelles. Eukaryotic cells have membrane-bound organelles and prokaryotic cells do not. I say membrane-bound organelles (mitochondrion, lysosomes) because both have ribosomes, which in come texts are considered organelles, but ribosomes are not membrane-bound (surrounded by a membrane). 3. Size. Eukaryotic cells are huge compared to prokaryotic cells. Most eukaryotic cells can be seen in detail with a simple light microscope. 4. Method of reproduction( cell division). Prokaryotic cells divide by binary fission and eukaryotic cells divide by mitosis or meiosis.
Some examples of organelles that could be present in both pro-and eukaryotic cells (it all depends on the species) are a: flagellum, plasmid (rare in eukarytoic cells, but not unheard of) and ribosome.
(1) organelles that produce proteins within the cell; (2) organelles that produce energy in the cell; and (3) specialty organelles. All of these organelles are active within the cytoplasm to help make the cell function correctly.
animal cells and plant cells are examples of Eukaryotes. Such cells can be found almost anywhere. Remember, Eukaryotic cells have a nucleus to them and Prokaryotic cells don't. The inside of your cheek is one of the easiest places to find animal cells if you want to look at them and for eukaryotic plant cells you can use the skin of an onion
Cell Membrane,Genetic Material,and Organelles
flagella and cillia and cytoskeleton
1. Nucleus. The main difference is that eukaryotic cells have a nucleus and prokaryotic cells do not. That is really the meaning of the words prokaryotic (before nucleus) and eukaryotic (true nucleus). 2. Organelles. Eukaryotic cells have membrane-bound organelles and prokaryotic cells do not. I say membrane-bound organelles (mitochondrion, lysosomes) because both have ribosomes, which in come texts are considered organelles, but ribosomes are not membrane-bound (surrounded by a membrane). 3. Size. Eukaryotic cells are huge compared to prokaryotic cells. Most eukaryotic cells can be seen in detail with a simple light microscope. 4. Method of reproduction( cell division). Prokaryotic cells divide by binary fission and eukaryotic cells divide by mitosis or meiosis.
Flagella, Cilia. and Microtubules / Microfilaments
Eukaryotic cells (from the Greek meaning truly nuclear) comprise all of the life kingdoms except monera. They can be easily distinguished through a membrane-bound nucleus. Diagram of an animal cell. Eukaryotic cells also contain many internal membrane-bound structures called organelles. These organelles such as the mitochondrion or chloroplast serve to perform metabolic functions and energy conversion. Other organelles like intracellular filaments provide structural support and cellular motility. The function of individual organelles is described in detail in the Cell Anatomy Section. Diagram of a plant cell. Another important member of the eukaryote family is the plant cell. They function essentially in the same manner as other eukaryotic cells, but there are three unique structures which set them apart. Plastids, cell walls, and vacuoles are present only in plant cells.
Some examples of organelles that could be present in both pro-and eukaryotic cells (it all depends on the species) are a: flagellum, plasmid (rare in eukarytoic cells, but not unheard of) and ribosome.
Tree cells and plant cells are similar, and animal cells differ from the other three (tree, plant, and bacteria). Bacteria are characterized by having round DNA instead of linear DNA. Round DNA is a characteristic of prokaryotic cells and not eukaryotic cells. Thus, bacteria is not a eukaryote. (Note: there are many more differences between eukaryotic cells and prokaryotic cells such as size, organelles....)
there's definitely more than three parts of a cell but I'm guessing you want: (this is for eukaryotic animal cells) - cell membrane : maintains homeostasis by allowing cell to control what enters and exits, also contains all of the organelles and cytoplasm - cytoplasm : watery substance in which the organelles are suspended, allows things to exist in solution inside cells and also provides volume and structure - organelles : membrane-contained 'cell organs' that perform the various functions of the cell, including respiration, housing DNA, producing proteins, etc. prokaryotic cells do not have organelles
(1) organelles that produce proteins within the cell; (2) organelles that produce energy in the cell; and (3) specialty organelles. All of these organelles are active within the cytoplasm to help make the cell function correctly.
Nucleus, Endoplasmic reticulum and ribosomes are three of many organelles found in both plant and animal cells.
There are no cells in organelles, organelles make up cells. Vira are different from organelles in that a virus has three basic features: a shell that serves as a body, mobility structures that help it latch on to something, and a DNA or RNA vector that they feed to the nucleus of a host cell.
animal cells and plant cells are examples of Eukaryotes. Such cells can be found almost anywhere. Remember, Eukaryotic cells have a nucleus to them and Prokaryotic cells don't. The inside of your cheek is one of the easiest places to find animal cells if you want to look at them and for eukaryotic plant cells you can use the skin of an onion
The mitochondria, Golgi apparatus and vacuole.