The cytoplasm has all the organelles in the cell membrane except for the nucleus.
the cell membrane functions as a sort of wall that protects the cell and holds everything inside.
Water makes up the majority of the environment inside a cell. It is essential for various cellular processes, including transporting molecules, maintaining cell structure, and facilitating chemical reactions.
Then the cell wouldn't keep it's shape and wouldn't be able to hold everything together inside of the cells. And the animal wouldn't have any cells.
The organelle that houses most of the cellular functions inside a plant cell, apart from the nucleus, is the central vacuole. This organelle helps maintain turgor pressure, store nutrients and waste, and carries out various metabolic processes crucial for the cell's survival.
Cytomembrane plasmic juice
Yeah. The cell wall keeps everything inside the plant cell inside. and everything else, OUTSIDE
penisses controll everything in the universe, everything, including ''the cell''
cytoplasm
controls the cell and regulates everything that goes on inside....
It stores "extra" stuff inside the cell - including wastes until the cell can dispose of them
A cell wall is the outermost layer of a cell, so, theoretically, it would have to protect the inside of the cell. Also, it would hold everything else inside in place.
A term for all the contents of a cell other than the nucleus is a Cytoplasm.
Everything inside the cell except the nucleus is part of the cytoplasm. The cytoplasm includes organelles, such as the endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, mitochondria, and ribosomes, as well as cytosol, which is the fluid that surrounds the organelles.
depends. how close do you mean. Because technically everything in the cell is close to the surface because of how small it is.
It is the protoplasm outside the nucleus of a cell.
everything inside the cell membrane but outside the nucleus is the cytoplasm