Biology, asked by kanhaiya6714, 10 months ago

What is the cell which present in plant but not in animal cell?

Answers

Answered by gangwalaarav02
0

vacuoles

The lysosomes are the animal cell's “garbage disposal”, while in plant cells the same function takes place in vacuoles. Plant cells have a cell wall, chloroplasts and other specialized plastids, and a large central vacuole, which are not found within animal cells.


kanhaiya6714: Your answer is wrong
Answered by Anonymous
1
Unique Plant Cell Features Include:

Plastids

Plastids include:

Amyloplasts, specialised for Amylum (or Starch) storage

Chromoplasts (chloroplasts are basically chromoplasts), they synthesise pigments of different colours.

Elaioplasts, specialised for the storage of lipids

Cell Wall

Funguses and Bacteria may also have a cell wall. However the Cell Wall of plant cells is never absent and has a unique chemical composition.

It's basically a layer of polysaccharides like cellulose and it is located outside the cell membrane.

A LARGE Vacuole

Animal, bacterial and many other types of cells may have a vacuole too, but its actually really small compared to the huge vacuole of plant cells. 

A vacuole is an organelle which basically contains water and inorganic or organic molecules in solution.

Plasmodesmata

These are pores in the primary cell wall. I'd get in too much depth trying to explain that.

Other minor differences have to do with

The centrosomes of animal and plant cells (all animal cells have centrioles, a centrosome component, but only some plant cells do) andThe absence of cilia in plant cells

They are also different when it comes to shape, plant cells tend to be rectangular. 


kanhaiya6714: Thanks
Similar questions