It travels through the cell and bumps into other parts of the cell.
The cell organelle you are referring to is the mitochondria. Mitochondria are known as the powerhouse of the cell because they generate energy in the form of ATP through a process called aerobic respiration, which involves the breakdown of food molecules in the presence of oxygen.
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.
The organelle that you would expect to find in a plant cell but not animal cell is the centrosomes.
The cell wall provides protection and structural support for the plant cell. Additionally, the central vacuole helps to maintain turgor pressure, providing support for the cell and the plant as a whole.
One main difference is that plant cells have a cell wall made of cellulose, while animal cells do not. Plant cells also typically have chloroplasts for photosynthesis, which animal cells lack. Plant cells often have a large central vacuole, while animal cells have smaller, scattered vacuoles.
yes!
Mitochondrion are found in both plant and animal cells.
both
both
The mitochondrion functions similarly for both plant cells and animal cells, producing the ATP used for energy. It can be considered the cell's power plant.
They are in both animal and plant cells.
Yes, it does. That is how it is related to a animal cell. :P
A Mitochondrion
converts energy
it is a organelle called the mitochondrion
i dont konw you tell me
it makes food turn into energy.