It depends on the type of stain used. H&E stain, stains nuclei and granules blue and other eosinophilic structures as red, pink, or orange. CV stains produce a purple color. Eosin produes red.
The structure that is seen is the cell wall. This keeps the shape of the cell and is only found in plant cells. The organelles that can be see in a stained onion cells all depends on your microscope. Under a x400 light microscope we could see the cell wall, cell membrane, nucleus and cytoplasm,
This would be a eukaryotic cell. The other type of cell being prokayotic and not containing any nucleus or organelles, such as bacteria and archaea.eukaryotic
all of them, bacteria have no organelles
The things that perform necessary activities for the cell are called organelles. Each organelle has their own job to accomplish for the cell.
Tiny cell structures that carry out specific functions within the cell are called organelles. Examples of organelles include the nucleus, mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum, and Golgi apparatus. Each organelle has a specific role in maintaining the cell's function and health.
Under a compound light microscope, you would not be able to see specific organelles like the lysosomes, peroxisomes, endoplasmic reticulum, and Golgi apparatus in an onion cell stained with iodine. These organelles are typically smaller and/or transparent, making them difficult to visualize with this type of microscope.
The structure that is seen is the cell wall. This keeps the shape of the cell and is only found in plant cells. The organelles that can be see in a stained onion cells all depends on your microscope. Under a x400 light microscope we could see the cell wall, cell membrane, nucleus and cytoplasm,
no
This would be a eukaryotic cell. The other type of cell being prokayotic and not containing any nucleus or organelles, such as bacteria and archaea.eukaryotic
organelles are the answer
all of them, bacteria have no organelles
No, the organelles are within the cell membrane (in the cytoplasm).
Organelles
Many cell organelles resemble sponges.
They are organelles;
When a tomato cell is stained with methylene blue, organelles such as the nucleus, vacuoles, and possibly some smaller structures like mitochondria or chloroplasts may become visible under the microscope. Methylene blue tends to bind to nucleic acids and can highlight these structures within the cell.
The things that perform necessary activities for the cell are called organelles. Each organelle has their own job to accomplish for the cell.