Biology, asked by aditishastri, 1 year ago

Why is the nucleus pushed to the periphery in plant cell?

Answers

Answered by MSMS4
4
The plant cells contain a large central vacuole which covers most of the Central and other areas of the cell. Due to this, nucleus does not get much space and is pushed towards the Periphery.
Answered by AadilPradhan
0

The nucleus pushed to the periphery in plant cell because of large central vacuole in the plant cell.

  • Only eukaryotic cells have a nucleus, a structure that is membrane-bound. The nucleus is a crucial component of plant cells because it:
  1. Promotes cell division.
  2. growth and metabolism are aided.
  3. conserves genetic or DNA data.
  • A sizable food vacuole filled with cell sap is present in each plant cell. It takes up at least 80% of the available space. As a result, the nucleus is pushed outward or into a corner. animal cell vacuoles are tiny.
  • The nucleus initially occupies the centre of the plant cell, but as the vacuole enlarges, it is pushed outward.
  • A single vacuole occupies a sizable portion of the majority of plant cells. The cytoplasm, along with the other organelles and the nucleus, are pushed outward in order to preserve the osmotic balance of the cell.

Hence, the nucleus is pushed to periphery because of the presence of large vacuoles in plant cell unlike animal cell.

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