Biology, asked by khuranatanya3665, 1 year ago

What is cytoplasm . explain the term

Answers

Answered by moinsiddique
0
The jellylike material that makes up much of a cell inside the cell membrane, and, in eukaryotic cells, surrounds the nucleus. The organelles of eukaryotic cells, such as mitochondria, the endoplasmic reticulum, and (in green plants) chloroplasts, are contained in the cytoplasm.


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Answered by divyanshugb
2

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Cytoplasm is a thick, jelly-like fluid inside the cell bound by a cell membrane. It occupies the space between the cell membrane and the nucleus. All the chemical reactions of cell occur in the cytoplasm. There are many small cytoplasmic bodies suspended in the cytoplasm. These are mitochondria, golgi bodies, ribosomes , endoplasmic reticulum, etc. These are called cell organelles.

\large\color{blue}{I \: hope \: this \: answer \: will \: be \: helpful.}

\huge\dag\sf\blue{By \: Divyanshu}

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