Prokaryotic cells. They do not have a nucleus, their genetic material is free in the cytoplasm as they do not have a need for compartmentalisation like more complex Eukaryotic cells that carry out more internal chemical mechanisms.
A tiny single cell without a nucleus is called a prokaryotic cell. These cells lack a membrane-bound nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles. Examples of prokaryotic cells include bacteria and archaea.
nucleus
A tiny organ in a cell is called a cell organelle. There are several such organelles in the cells such as cell wall, cytoplasm, nucleus, vacuoles etc. Cell organelles perform different functions to make the cell as a unit of life.
Inside every cell there is Nucleus and chronographs
A tiny organ in a cell is called an organelle.
It contains a tiny egg nucleus which will fuse with nucleus of the male cell.
chromatine material
Tiny cell structures that carry out specific functions within the cell are called organelles. Examples of organelles include the nucleus, mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum, and Golgi apparatus. Each organelle has a specific role in maintaining the cell's function and health.
The region in the nucleus that produces tiny cell particles needed in protein synthesis is the nucleolus. The nucleolus is responsible for assembling ribosomal subunits, which are essential for synthesizing proteins in the cell.
Tiny cell organelles include mitochondria (energy production), ribosomes (protein synthesis), endoplasmic reticulum (protein and lipid synthesis), Golgi apparatus (protein processing), lysosomes (waste removal), and peroxisomes (metabolism).
chromosomes
They are called organelles. For example. mitochodria is a power house of cell.