In the animal cell: Lysosome
In the plant cell: Central Vacuole
vacuoles
vacuoles
Materials are broken down by lysosmes. They are the recycle bin
vacuoles
vacuole
These acts refer to lysosomes in a cell. Lysosomes are membrane-bound organelles that contain digestive enzymes responsible for breaking down cellular waste material and debris. Just like the stomach which breaks down food, lysosomes break down cellular components for recycling or disposal.
Organelles such as the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus act like storage sheds in the cell, storing and releasing chemicals for cell use. The endoplasmic reticulum is involved in synthesizing and storing proteins and lipids, while the Golgi apparatus processes and packages molecules for transport within the cell or for secretion.
Vacuoles in plant cells serve various functions such as storing water, maintaining turgor pressure, storing nutrients, and breaking down unwanted materials. They also play a role in cell growth and maintaining cell structure.
A lysosome is an organelle in a cell that acts as the "garbage disposal" by breaking down and recycling waste materials, old cell parts, and foreign substances.
In a plant cell, starch acts as a storage of glucose for aerobic respiration. In animal cells, glycogen acts as a storage of glucose for aerobic respiration.
Lysosomes act as disposal.They destroy unnessesary things.
Membrane encased cell organelles, called lysosomes, act as the stomach for the cell. Lysosomes contain powerful digestive enzymes that would actually break down and kill the host cell if they ever got loose. The lysosome is used to break down proteins, complex polysaccharides, and fat molecules into simple sugars, sugars that the cell can easily use to make energy.