Prokaryote
Scientifically explaining, they are membrane-covered organelles that are found only in the eukaryotic cell. Prokaryotic cells do not have membrane-covered organelles. The only organelle they have, not membrane-covered, are ribosomes.
a prokaryotic cell is a cell that does not have a nucleus or membrance covered organelles . and a a eukaryotic is a is a cell that has a nucleus membrane covered organelles.
They are not covered by a membrane.
A prokaryotic cell which is plant cell
In a typical animal cell, the only major organelles not covered by membranes are the ribosomes. Ribosomes are composed of r-RNA and proteins.
No, bacteria do not have membrane-covered organelles. They lack membrane-bound organelles such as mitochondria, nucleus, and endoplasmic reticulum found in eukaryotic cells. Bacteria have a single cell membrane surrounding their cytoplasm.
this are organelles enclosed by a membrane
Prokaryotes have no membrane covered organelles. The word means 'before the nut'. 'Nut' in this case is a nucleus. These are primitive one-celled organisms like bacteria.
No, the organelles are within the cell membrane (in the cytoplasm).
Membrane covered organelles.
All eukaryotic cells have membrane-covered compartments called organelles, such as the nucleus, mitochondria, and endoplasmic reticulum, which are responsible for specific cellular functions. These organelles help to organize cellular activities and provide distinct environments for specialized functions within the cell.
As a general rule, practically all the internal organelles of a cell are covered by a protective membrane, except for one type, which couldn't even be called a real organelle, and those are the Ribosomes. More a macromolecular assemble than a cell organelle, the reason because they aren't membrane-bound is because they can directly interact with the membrane in order to exchange proteins, so, having their own membrane would actually act as a barrier for them to do their job correctly.