The cell wall of a bacterial cell is made of peptidoglycan, which is also know as murein. This is a wall of polysaccharide chains cross-linked by peptides called D-amino acids.
peptidoglycans, mucopeptides, murein
is a eukaryote
that is called the cell wall
No, there is no similarity in bacterial cell walls and plant cell walls. They are different morphologically and also in chemical composition; plant cell walls are made up of cellulose, whereas bacterial cell walls are made up of peptidoglycan (also known as murein).
The cell walls of plants are composed of cellulose.
Animal cells and some protists e.g., amoeba, have no cell wall. Plant and fungal cells have walls. In plants the wall is composed of cellulose while fungal cells have cell walls composed of chitin.
is a eukaryote
Yes it does. Behind the bacterial cell wall. Your new word for the day in biology. This cell wall is composed of a material called peptidoglycan.
the cell wall is not composed of bacteri it is composed of cellulouse
Cell wall made out of cellulose is the cell wall of a plant. A fungi has a cell wall composed of chitin and a bacteria has a cell wall composed of glycoprotein.
No, bacterial cell also have phospholipid bilayers.
Yes, teichoic acids are bacterial cell wall polysaccharides.
that is called the cell wall
a cell wall
yes they have a cell wall and membrane
They have a cell wall and no nucleus.
cell wall
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