No. Animal cells have no cell walls.
Actually, urochordates (tunicates) produce cellulose.
whats funny is they didnt ask if they had cell walls. Smooth....
No.
Cellulose is a plant sugar complexed to be used as structural support. It is not found in meat.
The only part of the cell that is made of cellulose is the rigid cell wall. The cell wall is a protective outer covering(only in plant cells) that protects the cell from many things, such as weather conditions etc.
No, cellulose is not a living material. It is a complex carbohydrate that makes up the cell walls of plants and is produced by living organisms, but once it is formed, it is not considered to be living.
Well, I'm not sure there is a really a "problem" with cellulose, but if you're talking about ingestion and digestion, it really depends on what animal you're talking about. Cellulose is a structural polysaccharide (sugar) that is found in the cell walls of plants. It contains beta 1-4 glycosidic linkages between glucose molecules that cannot be broken in the digestive tract of most animals. However, ruminant animals (cows, goats, sheep) have microorganisms in their gut that can break cellulose down using the enzyme cellulase and the cellulose can then be utilized by the animal. So, for most animals, cellulose cannot be broken down and used.
Wool does not contain cellulose. Only materials that are from plant derivatives do. Cellulose is the main structural material in all plant cells.
Fungi. It's cells have cell wall that didn't contain cellulose but chitin.
Plant cells contain cellulose and chlorophyll necessary for photosynthesis
Plant cell walls are composed of Cellulose
mitochondria, chloroplasts, cellulose cell wall
prokaryotic cells does not have nuclear membrane surrounded DNA, a characteristic of only bacterial cells.
No! Only plats have cell walls! Animal cells don't!
Plant cells have chloroplasts and cell walls made of cellulose, and animal cells do not. Animal cells contain centrioles and plant cells do not.
Most living things are built from cells, and that means both animals and plants. In fact the word "cellulose" comes from the name of the substance found in the cell walls of plants.
2 polysaccharides found in plants are starch and cellulose. :)
Cellulose is the type of polysaccharide that accounts for the strength of plant cells and is not digestible to most animals. It provides structural support to plant cell walls and is made up of a long chain of glucose molecules bonded together. Most animals lack the enzymes needed to break down cellulose for digestion.
Plant cells have chloroplasts and cell walls made of cellulose, and animal cells do not. Animal cells contain centrioles and plant cells do not.