Biology, asked by tavisha1102, 1 year ago

Do saccharomyces contain membrane bounded organelles

Answers

Answered by XSMARTYSID
0
Hello .... Here is your answer

Saccharomyces cerevasie ( Yeast ) is eukaryotic which means it has a well defined nucleus and has membrane bound organelles.

Prokaryotes lack membrane bound organelles

Membrane Bound Organelles

An organelle is an organized and specialized structure within a living cell. The organelles include the nucleus, ribosomes, endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, vacuoles, lysosomes, mitochondria, and, in plants, chloroplasts.

@X-SMARTY
Answered by priyacnat
0

Answer:

Eukaryotic organisms, such as fungus, have membrane-bound organelles, and Saccharomyces is one of these.

Prokaryotes are unicellular creatures without genuine nuclei, including membrane-bound organs, mitochondria, chloroplasts, and golgi complexes. They've chosen nucleoid, a genetic substance devoid of a nuclear encasing. They have cell-lined walls. Eukaryotic organisms, such as fungus, have membrane-bound organelles, and Saccharomyces is one of these.

Streptococcus bacteria and blue-green algae are two examples. Injecting parasites into its host's bloodstream, the blood-sucking protozoan species Plasmodium causes malaria by killing the host's red blood cells. Chlamydomonas is a monocellular eukaryote.

Where Saccharomyces is a yeast. All these are eukaryotes and have organelles connected to the membrane.

To know more about organelles check below link:

https://brainly.in/question/49464703

To know more about saccharomyces check below link:

https://brainly.in/question/15595117

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