Plant cell
plant cells
Plant cells contain the Chloroplast type organelle.
Almost every living cell
Yes, there is one type of cell which does not contain DNA, and that is the red blood cell.
All cells, including animal, plant, and bacterial cells, have cytoplasm. The cytoplasm is a jelly-like substance that fills the cell and is where many of the cell's organelles are located and where many cellular processes take place.
There are many differences between plant and animal cells. Some of the differences are:Plant cells have cell walls made of cellulose; animals cells have a cell membrane, not a cell wall.The cell walls of plants contain plasmodesmata - microscopic channels - that traverse the cell walls of the cells; animal cells contain no plasmodesmataPlant cells have a big main vacuole in them; animal cells have many small vacuoles.Plant cells contain chloroplasts and use photosynthesis to help produce food; no animal cell ever contains chloroplasts.Plant cells are rectangular in shape; animal cells are circular, irregular or defined shapes depending on the type of cellAnimal cells have a centrosome; plant cells do not.Animal cells have a cytoskeleton but plant cells do not.
Prokaryotic cells contain circular DNA.
Eukaryotic cells contain linear DNA.
The number of chromosomes in each resulting cell depends on the type of cell division occurring. In mitosis, each resulting daughter cell will contain the same number of chromosomes as the original cell, maintaining the diploid number in somatic cells. In meiosis, each resulting gamete will contain half the number of chromosomes, resulting in haploid cells. For humans, this means 46 chromosomes in mitotic cells and 23 in meiotic cells.
Virtually all cells contain a cell membrane, including plants and animals.
Either phloem or palisade cells
All complex cells contain mitochondria.