This structure is likely a vesicle, which is a small membrane-bound sac found in the cytoplasm of the cell. Vesicles can contain various substances, including liquid, and are involved in transporting and storing molecules within the cell.
The liquid portion of the cytoplasm is called cytosol. It is a gel-like substance where organelles are suspended and where many cellular activities take place.
The clear liquid part of the cytoplasm is called the cytosol. It contains water, salts, and organic molecules, and serves as a medium for cellular reactions to take place.
No, viruses do not have a cell membrane. Viruses are acellular particles composed of genetic material (DNA or RNA) surrounded by a protein coat called a capsid. They lack the cellular structures seen in living organisms, such as cell membranes.
A wet cell A cell that contains a solid electrolyte is a dry cell.
They both have a liquid cytoplasm (APEX)
the viruses doesn't have is no nucleus, cytoplasm,organelles, or cell membrane.
cytoplasm is liquidthe whole thing is the liquid part!
cytoplasm
Cytoplasm is the liquid within the cell. It is essentially everywhere in the cell.
The cytoplasm
The liquid material between the nucleus and the cell membrane is called cytoplasm. It contains various organelles, proteins, and nutrients that support cellular functions. The cytoplasm plays a crucial role in cell metabolism and transportation of molecules within the cell.
Cytoplasm.
Cytoplasm
cytoplasm
Cytoplasm
Yes, prokaryotes have liquid cytoplasm inside their cells.