The structural organisation of a plant cell and animal cell
Answers
Animal cells and plant cells share the common components of a nucleus, cytoplasm, mitochondria and a cell membrane. Plant cells have three extra components, a vacuole, chloroplast and a cell wall.
So far as the structural organization is concerned, all organisms belong to either of the two categories — the prokaryotes, including bacteria and blue-green algae, and the eukaryotes, comprising all other plants and animals. The French microbiologist Edward Chatton first used these terms in 1928.
Prokaryotes (pro: before; karyon: nucleus) lack a membrane-bound definite nucleus. The cellular contents are differentiated into two distinct regions, the cytoplasm and the nucleoid, the latter consisting of the nuclear material containing fine DNA fibrils. The prokaryotic cell size ranges from 1-10 µm.
Explanation:
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Explanation:
both plants and animals are eukaryotic cell