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Not necessarily. Protozoan do not have rigid cell walls. The antibiotic works by destroying the rigid cell was of a bacteria, thus destroying the bacteria. The protozoan have the same pressure on the outside of the cell, as they do on the inside of the cell. With no rigid cell wall, the antibiotic would not work the same, as there is no cell wall or pressure to disturb.
cell wall
Mainly it is the cell wall. It surrounds the cell
Xylem cells mature and harden and become so rigid that water can't diffuse into the cell. The cell dries and dies..
The rigid outter covering of plant cells is called the cell wall
The rigid covering mainly found around plant cells and some bacteria is called a cell wall.
They do not seem more rigid, they are more rigid! They both have cell walls. Many eubacteria, the bacteria you are most familiar with, have cell walls of peptidoglycan. Plants have cell walls made of interlocking cellulose.
Not necessarily. Protozoan do not have rigid cell walls. The antibiotic works by destroying the rigid cell was of a bacteria, thus destroying the bacteria. The protozoan have the same pressure on the outside of the cell, as they do on the inside of the cell. With no rigid cell wall, the antibiotic would not work the same, as there is no cell wall or pressure to disturb.
cell wall
Eubateria is a very large group of bacteria that has rigid cell walls. It is stated that eubateria is in the class called clostridia and the order called clostridiale.
No, Plants and bacteria have rigid cell walls. we humans have a membrane
A characteristic of most bacteria is having cell walls which are rigid. There are different species of bacteria which have varied traits.
cell wall
Mainly it is the cell wall. It surrounds the cell
Xylem cells mature and harden and become so rigid that water can't diffuse into the cell. The cell dries and dies..
if talking about transportin plants then it is wather that's keeps it rigid
the answer is spores