the cytoplasm
Edited answer:
In the protoplast
No I don't think it does. I think the organelles just sort of float around in the cell.
hold organelles in place, maintain cells shape, and act as tracks that guide organelles and molecules as they move within the cell.
The cytoskeleton of the cell, made of microtubules to move organelles, microfilaments to contract the cell, especially during cell division, and intermediate filaments to provide support and anchor the organelles, does all of these things.
A bacterial cell is a simple, or prokaryote, cell. This means it has no nucleus or other cell organelles. A plant cell is a complex, or eukaryote, cell. Plant cells have organelles. Both cells have a cell wall. A bacterial cell is a simple, or prokaryote, cell. This means it has no nucleus or other cell organelles. A plant cell is a complex, or eukaryote, cell. Plant cells have organelles. Both cells have a cell wall.
Probably same as a regular cell, depending on the type of cancer. Cancerous cells are basically mutated cells that don't stop reproducing, hence forming a tumor. The organelles should be the same.
Organelles are in every cell. Virus do not have organelles.
eukaryotic cells or animal cells for example
the jellylike substance that holds all of the organelles within the cell in place.
yes. organelles or cell parts can be found in plant and animal cells
Organelles. They are like any living part of the cell. Organelles such as the mitochondrion, the vacuole, and the cytoplasm, things like that.
No, there is no single cell that contains all organelles. Different types of cells have different organelles depending on their function. Organelles are specialized structures within cells that perform specific functions, so no single cell contains all of them.
Without membrane bound organelles. These cells do have organelles.A prokaryote cell.