Biology, asked by sullivane2023, 1 month ago

Describe what you think you would see if you could look inside a single-celled organism with a powerful microscope.

Answers

Answered by eshaanboruah
3

Explanation:

We would firstly find a cell wall . Then there lies a dense jelly like substance called the cytoplasm. There would be 70s Ribosomes suspended in it . There would be a nuleoid which contains the DNA and RNA . Cell Organelles would not be found .

Answered by PravinRatta
1

Cell organelles are not present, but we can see cell wall, cytoplasm, ribosomes, etc.

  • Single-celled organisms are also called prokaryotes.
  • They are in an irregular form.
  • The term "cell wall" refers to the structural layer that surrounds a cell just beyond the cell membrane. Under a microscope, it is plainly evident.
  • Peptidoglycan makes up the cell wall.
  • The cytoplasm, which resembles gelatinous liquid and is composed of water and enzymes, will be present.
  • The only organelles that are visible in unicellular organisms are ribosomes.
  • The 70S ribosome, one of the two varieties, will be noticeable in unicellular organisms.
  • Prokaryotes don't have nuclei; instead, they have nucleoid structures that hold DNA or RNA.
  • Prokaryotes are devoid of membrane-bound cell organelles such the nucleus, endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria, and Golgi apparatus.

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