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No chloroplasts in cheek and onion cells
The larger organelles, such as nucleus, mitochondria, and cellular membrane.
The cheek cell has a nucleus and so does a leaf cell.
Due to the techniques of obtaining the samples, onion cells remain intact in the tissue, but because cheek cells are obtained by rubbing a toothpick on your cheek, you are disrupting the cheek tissue, and instead of getting a sheet of cheek cells, you get individual cheek cells.
Cheek cells a typical animal cells.They have mitochondria in them.
No chloroplasts in cheek and onion cells
You can start by setting the microscope at a low magnification of around 100x to locate and focus on the cheek cells. Once you have found the cells, you can increase the magnification to 400x or higher to observe them in greater detail. Adjust the focus and lighting as needed for a clear view.
The Onion cell and cheek cell both had cytoplasm, nucleuses, and cell membranes under 400x Magnification
Cheek cells usually have a vacuole. The cheek cells are part of the human cells and are therefore classified as animal cells which usually have vacuoles.
They look like animal cells which kind of look like small tiny blobs if you see them under a microscope with a very low objective. And of course if you see the cheek cells under a high objective, you will see the blobs but it will be in a close up. But it also depends on the cheek cells....
Cheek cells are easy to collect by scraping inside the mouth because they are loose and easily shed from the lining of the cheek. The cells are also large and flat, making them visible to the naked eye. Additionally, the collection process is non-invasive and does not require any special skills or equipment.
No, Animal cells do not have chloroplasts.
no
They only thing you can see in a cheek cell would be the nucleus and the cellular membrane. These cells must be stained because they won't be visible under a light microscope all by themselves.
The cheek contains muscle cells, covered by epithelial cells.
To make slides of cheek cells for microscopy, you will need a microscope slide, cover slip, swab or toothpick to collect the cells, a staining solution (such as iodine), and a microscope with at least 400x magnification. You may also need a pipette or dropper to apply the staining solution.
The larger organelles, such as nucleus, mitochondria, and cellular membrane.