Biology, asked by muskaanyadav106, 1 month ago

Difference between single membrane bound organelles and organelle without any membrane. ​

Answers

Answered by samriddhisinghyadav2
2

Membrane-bound organelles are surrounded by a plasma membrane to keep their internal fluids separate from the cytoplasm of the rest of the cell. Non-membrane bound organelles are more solid structures that are not fluid-filled, so they have no need for a membrane.

Answered by itsluvbhardwaj
1

Answer:

Eukaryotic cells contain membrane-bound organelles, meaning that these organelles (e.g. mitochondria, lysosome, etc.) are surrounded by a phospholipid bilayer (membrane). This allows organelles within the cells to control what enters and leaves it by using a selectively permeable membrane.

Non-membrane bound organelles are more solid structures that are not fluid-filled, so they have no need for a membrane. Examples of non-membrane bound organelles are ribosomes, the cell wall, and the cytoskeleton.

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