peoxea, lochea, hankea, notys, and archea.
yes, humans and animals have lysosomes, along with plant cells. But in the case of lysosomes in plants, the vacuoles take the lysosomes place. The lysosomes are the digestive system in a cell and they energize the cell by digesting proteins. :)
Lysosomes are in eukariyotes.So animal,plant,fungi,protist kingdom have lysosomes.
You would expect to find an abundance of lysosomes in cells that are involved in breaking down cellular waste and recycling materials, such as macrophages, which are a type of immune cell that engulfs and digests pathogens and debris through the process of phagocytosis.
Lysosomes are not involved in secretion. Lysosomes are organelles responsible for breaking down and recycling cellular waste and debris. Secretory vesicles are responsible for transporting materials for secretion out of the cell.
No, lysosomes are not prokaryotic. Lysosomes are membrane-bound organelles found in eukaryotic cells, which are more complex cells that have a nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles. Prokaryotic cells, such as bacteria, do not have membrane-bound organelles like lysosomes.
where can i find the exactepictures of lysosomes?
Lysosomes, they are the disposal system of the cell.
Lysosomes contain digestive enzymes, so if it ruptured it would cause the digestive enzymes to digest and kill other surrounding cells.
Lysosomes hold enzymes that were created by the cell. The purpose of the lysosome is to digest things. They might be used to digest food or break down the cell when it dies.
lysosomes
Lysosomes
it's not the mitochondria, it's lysosomes. mitochondria is composed of proteins and enzymes.
Lysosomes is correct.
lysosomes are the "recycling center" of the cell
lysosomes lysosomes
mitochondria
Lysosomes are the vesicles that contain a cell's digestive enzymes.