use your brain not your mind
use your mind not your brain
inshort use your head
Bacterial cell walls are made of peptidoglycan (also called murein).
Vaccine
Frederick Griffith hypothesized that live, harmless bacteria and the heat-killed bacteria were mixed, some factor was transferred from the heat-killed cells into the live cells! it has nothing to do with bats flying thru walls!!
Not all of them. Most bacteria have cell walls.
No, absolutely not- cell walls are a characteristic of plants, bacteria and fungi- animal cells do not have cell walls ever. They have cell membranes, which are less rigid and less resistant to damage.
All bacteria have cell walls. A cell wall outside the cell membrane is found in plants, fungi, bacteria, algae, and archaea. This cell wall is often a target of antibiotics. Viruses also attach to the bacteria cell walls. The bacteria that have cell walls include staph and strep.
No, bacteria cell walls is made up of peptidoglycan also called murein.
It gives the cell protection and support, but it is only found on some kinds of cells. Animals don't have cell walls. Plants, bacteria, fungi, and algae have cell walls.
Most, but not all bacteria as well as archea have cell walls. Eukaryotic cell walls of plants are entirely different than bacterial cell walls, however.
No
Yes, bacteria walls have peptidoglycan. Peptidoglycan is that target for antibiotics like penicillin, which prevent the cell wall formation. This causes the bacteria to burst with turgor pressure.
Only plant cells have cell walls.