Biology, asked by harshmehto7831, 1 year ago

Is microtubule in plant and animal cells?

Answers

Answered by khanruhi905
0

HERE IS YOUR ANSWER

While both animal and plant cells have microtubule organizing centers (MTOCs), animal cells also have centrioles associated with the MTOC: a complex called the centrosome. ... Plant cells have a cell wall, chloroplasts and other specialized plastics, and a large central vacuole, whereas animal cells do not.

HOPE IT HELPS

Answered by Jasleen0599
0

Microtubule in plant and animal cells.

  • While microtubule organising centres (MTOCs) are present in both animal and plant cells, only animal cells have centrioles connected to the MTOC, a structure known as the centrosome.
  • Asters and centrioles are two more cell structures created by microtubules. Animal cells contain both of these features, but not plant cells.
  • Microtubules (MTs) are essential for cell division, growth, and morphogenesis in plant cells. Contrary to animal cells, plant cells' cytoplasmic streaming and organelle mobility are primarily ascribed to the actin cytoskeleton (Shimmen, 2007).
  • The centrosome, which is situated next to the nucleus and close to the centre of interphase (nondividing) cells, is the main microtubule-organizing centre in animal cells.
  • Plant cells, in contrast to animal cells, develop a bewildering variety of microtubule arrays in the absence of centrosomes, where microtubules are nucleated at distinct centriole-containing centrosomes.
  • All eukaryotic cells include microtubules in their cytoplasm. Microtubules are found in a variety of specialised cellular structures in addition to the cytoplasm, including cilia, flagella, basal bodies, centrioles, astral rays, spindle apparatus, chromosomal fibres, etc.

#SPJ2

Similar questions