Endoplasmic reticulum (smooth and rough), ribosomes, Golgi Apparatus, lysosomes, peroxisomes, mitochondria.
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.
Yes, an animal cell has a nucleus which contains genetic material, and various organelles such as mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, and lysosomes that perform specific functions within the cell.
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.
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).
Chloroplast ..cell wall ..cytoskeleton
Organelles can be found in all kinds of cells: animal, plant, bacterial, etc.
All animal cells are eukaryote. A membrane bound nucleus and many membrane bound organelles.
All of them. But especially chromosomes and the nucleus
no
A cell wall and chloroplasts.
I am pretty sure all those are in animal cells.
a cell membrane
a cell membrane
It suspends organelles within a cell
Yes. Cells, whether it be animal, bacterial, plant, or fungi, all have cytoplasm which suspends all its organelles in place.
cell walls and chloroplasts
It suspends organelles within a cell