The Golgi body (also know as Golgi apparatus, Golgi complex) has the same purpose in plants as in animals; it organises, packages, and distributes organic compounds (proteins, carbohydrates).
The Golgi apparatus stores and packages chemicals in cells. It receives proteins and lipids from the endoplasmic reticulum, modifies them, and packages them into vesicles for transport to other parts of the cell or for secretion.
The organelle that contains the cell's DNA is the nucleus. The nucleus acts as the control center of the cell and stores the genetic material in the form of chromosomes.
Within your cells, the genetic material that controls your traits is located in an organelle called the nucleus. The nucleus contains DNA, which consists of genes that code for proteins and determine an individual's traits and characteristics.
Bacterial cells lack a nucleus, which means their genetic material is not enclosed within a membrane-bound organelle like in eukaryotic cells.
Eukaryotic cells have a nucleus, which is a membrane-bound organelle that houses the cell's genetic material. Prokaryotic cells, such as bacteria, do not have a nucleus and their genetic material is located in the cytoplasm.
Golgi
The cell membrane (I think)
Cytoplasm, but it isn't an organelle.
The chromosomal hereditary material is packaged in the nucleus in eukaryotic cells but not in prokaryotic cells.
This organelle is called the nucleus.
In those cells that are eukaryotes, the organelle is the nucleus. In those that are not, the genetic material is not found in an organelle but just condensed in the cytoplasm.
The Nucleus
The nucleus.
Nucleus
Nucleus
Cytoplasm
The Golgi apparatus stores and packages chemicals in cells. It receives proteins and lipids from the endoplasmic reticulum, modifies them, and packages them into vesicles for transport to other parts of the cell or for secretion.