Lysosomes are found in animal cells. Their jobs are to break up waste and cellular debris. This is performed by vacuoles in plant and yeast cells.
Lysosomes are distributed among different types of eukaryotic cells by their level of nutrients. Cells processing a high quantity of larger nutrients will generally have more lysosomes than other cells.
No, lysosomes are not unique to neurons. They are found in many types of animal cells.
Eukariyotes have lysosomes in their cells.Prokariyotes lack lysosomes in them.
No. Lysosomes are vesicles within cells that contain enzymes to digest particles of "food"
Lysosomes are found in both plant and animal cells.
# why do blood cells have so many lysosomes?
Lysosomes are particularly abundant in cells that have a high demand for degrading cellular components, such as macrophages, which phagocytize foreign substances, and digestive cells in the intestinal lining. Additionally, cells that secrete large amounts of enzymes, like pancreatic acinar cells, also contain many lysosomes to process and recycle these enzymes.
Yes, eukaryotic cells have lysosomes.
Yes, lysosomes are found in both plant and animal cells
Actually, plant cells can have lysosomes but they usually don't. Hydrolytic enzymes of plant cells are more often found in the vacuole. Animal cells usually have lysosomes as well, but sometimes they don't.
the cells
Yes, there are lysosomes in animal cells. This is where cellular digestion of debris and waste occurs in the cell.