A living animal cell can be compared to a city in that it has various organelles that perform specific functions, akin to different buildings in a city. The organelles, like the nucleus, mitochondria, and endoplasmic reticulum, work together to maintain the cell's functions, similar to how various facilities in a city serve different purposes. Each organelle has a specific role, just like different buildings in a city are designated for specific functions.
Some important organelles in an animal cell include the nucleus (containing genetic material), mitochondria (producing energy), endoplasmic reticulum (involved in protein synthesis), Golgi apparatus (modifying and packaging proteins), lysosomes (breaking down waste), and cytoskeleton (providing structure and support).
Some plant-specific organelles include the central vacuole, plastids (chloroplasts, chromoplasts, leucoplasts), and amyloplasts, while animal-specific organelles include centrioles, lysosomes, and flagella. These organelles play unique roles in the cellular functions of each organism.
Organelles in an animal cell work together to maintain the cell's functions. For example, the nucleus contains DNA instructions that control the cell's activities, which are then carried out by the ribosomes in protein synthesis. Mitochondria produce energy for the cell, which is used by other organelles like the endoplasmic reticulum to carry out various cellular processes.
Organelles are contained within cells; each cell contains many of them. Some animals may by coincidence have the same number of organelles as another animal, but as a general rule they do not.
Lysosomes are found in animal cells but not plant cells.
what types of organelles do animal cells have
yes animal cells and plant cells do have organelles
centrioles
Of course organelles are found in animal and plant cells. They are in every living cell
yes. organelles or cell parts can be found in plant and animal cells
Some important organelles in an animal cell include the nucleus (containing genetic material), mitochondria (producing energy), endoplasmic reticulum (involved in protein synthesis), Golgi apparatus (modifying and packaging proteins), lysosomes (breaking down waste), and cytoskeleton (providing structure and support).
Electron microscopes show that animal and plant cells have organelles. The same microscopes show that bacteria do not have organelles.
Transparency is rare in the animal world because cells have organelles, to be truly clear, all organelles must die.
Nucleus, Endoplasmic reticulum and ribosomes are three of many organelles found in both plant and animal cells.
Animal cells use organelles (so do plant cells). Cells with organelles are called "eukaryotic" which means these are cells that have a nucleus (which is one of the organelles).
Yes
organelles