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they are both found in many types of cells
Yes. We have different types of cells, such as blood, skin, muscle cells, etc. But we all have the same organelles in our cells
There are different types of cells, but the structures are basically same, with similar organelles and other structures.
Cells can be the same, but there are many, many different types of cells. These will be different depending on their function and location. For example, a cell found in cardiac tissue will be different to one found in liver tissue.
The majority of the cells have the same DNA is a true statement about the various types of cells found in an individual multicellular organism. Different genes are expressed in different cells is another true statement.
true
Yes. Different plants will have the same types of cells in them, unless the difference is such as between monocotyledonous (monocots) trees or dicotyledonous (dicots) trees. Dicots have two types of mesophyll cells- Palisade and Spongy while Monocots have only one type of mesophyll cell, which looks like a spongy cell but has more chloroplasts. But all dicots will have same cells as each other, and all the monocots will have same cells as each other. best answer: ferns only have one type of cell, its called arrogant-bitch!
every cell is different, different size different functions different placements in the structure
no they are made up of many different cell parts
true
no. plants have specialization. they contain many different types of cells, including parenchyma, epidermis, pericycle, collenchyma, schlerenchyma, vascular: xylem-tracheids/vessels, phloem-sieve/companion cells, and many types of meristematic cells.
Blood is considered a tissue, as it is made up of different types of cells serving the same function. These cells include red and white blood cells.