The smooth endoplasmic reticulum in a plant cell transports materials. It has enzymes and produces/digests lipids (fats) and membrane proteins. It pieces off from the rough endoplasmic reticulum, transporting the newly-made proteins and lipids to the Golgi body and membranes.
Smooth ER is important in the synthesis of lipids and membrane proteins
The smooth ER is found in both plant and animal cells. It is an important organelle for eukaryotic cells (like plant and animal cells). If a cell does not have smooth ER, it is likely to be prokaryotic (like bacteria) because they are simpler and less likely to have organelles.
Chloroplasts, Golgi bodies, ribosomes, mitochondria, cell wall, cell membrane, cytoplasm, vacuoles, nucleolus, smooth ER, rough ER, and vesicles.
Smooth ER aren't covered in ribosomes, but rough ER are. ER are like transport tubes that go through the cell.
Rough ER is studded with ribosomes and are involved in modifying proteins. Smooth ER has no ribosomes and is involved with making and modifying fats. Smooth ER lacks the ribosomes that cover the rough ER.
what cells have Rough ER and smooth ER
plant
plant
plant
plant cell
yes
yes it does
the pistal da
IT is found in both
No, they do not. Prokaryotic cells have no membrane-bound organelles such as rough endoplasmic reticulum. The 70s ribosomes found in prokaryotic cells are therefore free in the cytoplasm as opposed to attached to the rough endoplasmic reticulum.
The smooth ER is found in both plant and animal cells. It is an important organelle for eukaryotic cells (like plant and animal cells). If a cell does not have smooth ER, it is likely to be prokaryotic (like bacteria) because they are simpler and less likely to have organelles.
The smooth ER makes lipids.
According to Biology, both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells have a smooth ER, has well as a rough ER > endoplasmic reticulum.