No, bacteria do not have membrane-covered organelles. They lack membrane-bound organelles such as mitochondria, nucleus, and endoplasmic reticulum found in eukaryotic cells. Bacteria have a single cell membrane surrounding their cytoplasm.
Scientifically explaining, they are membrane-covered organelles that are found only in the eukaryotic cell. Prokaryotic cells do not have membrane-covered organelles. The only organelle they have, not membrane-covered, are ribosomes.
Yes it is an organelle. They are in photosynthetic eukariyotes
This organelle is the chloroplast.
As a general rule, practically all the internal organelles of a cell are covered by a protective membrane, except for one type, which couldn't even be called a real organelle, and those are the Ribosomes. More a macromolecular assemble than a cell organelle, the reason because they aren't membrane-bound is because they can directly interact with the membrane in order to exchange proteins, so, having their own membrane would actually act as a barrier for them to do their job correctly.
The organelle covered by a double layer of plasma membranes is the mitochondria.
the rough endoplasmic reticulum
rough endoplasmic reticulum
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No, bacteria do not have membrane-covered organelles. They lack membrane-bound organelles such as mitochondria, nucleus, and endoplasmic reticulum found in eukaryotic cells. Bacteria have a single cell membrane surrounding their cytoplasm.
Scientifically explaining, they are membrane-covered organelles that are found only in the eukaryotic cell. Prokaryotic cells do not have membrane-covered organelles. The only organelle they have, not membrane-covered, are ribosomes.
No, they are not. Neither prokaryotes like bacteria nor eukaryotes (like our cells) have membrane bound ribosomes.
The organelles covered in ribosomes are the rough endoplasmic recitillium.
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Which organelle !
The nucleus is an organelle. It is not found in an organelle.
Yes it is an organelle. They are in photosynthetic eukariyotes