No, gram positive cells do not possess an outer membrane.
Yes, gram-negative bacteria possess an outer membrane.
Yes, Gram-negative bacteria possess an outer membrane.
In animal cells, the plasma membrane forms the outer boundary of the cell. In fungi and plant cells, a cell wall exists outside the plasma membrane. Gram-positive bacteria have outer cell walls, while Gram-negative bacteria possess inner and outer plasma membranes.
No, gram positive bacteria do not have an outer membrane.
No, Gram-positive bacteria do not have an outer membrane.
Yes, gram-negative bacteria possess an outer membrane.
Yes, Gram-negative bacteria possess an outer membrane.
In animal cells, the plasma membrane forms the outer boundary of the cell. In fungi and plant cells, a cell wall exists outside the plasma membrane. Gram-positive bacteria have outer cell walls, while Gram-negative bacteria possess inner and outer plasma membranes.
No, gram positive bacteria do not have an outer membrane.
No, Gram-positive bacteria do not have an outer membrane.
The cell membrane is the outer boundary of animal cells and plant cells, but plant cells also have a cell wall to protect their cells. The cell membrane and cell walls are the outer boundaries of cells.
Virus have no cells
membrane
Not really possible to make a venn diagram, but here's a list: Similarities: In Bacteria Involve a peptidoglycan layer Differences Gram-negative is much more toxic Gram-negative is crystal violet in the Gram stain while Gram-positive is red
In a Gram-negative bacterial cell, peptidoglycan is present but in a much thinner layer compared to Gram-positive bacteria. However, unlike Gram-positive bacteria, Gram-negative cells do not have a teichoic acid layer. Additionally, they possess an outer membrane containing lipopolysaccharides (LPS), which is absent in Gram-positive bacteria. Therefore, teichoic acids are not found in Gram-negative bacterial cells.
Cytoplasm
Cell membrane