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Do Bacteria (prokaryote) have the organelles present in eukaryotes (ribosomes, ER, golgi bodies, mitochondria..etc) ?????

2007-04-16 00:00:43 · 3 answers · asked by redrubies 2 in Science & Mathematics Biology

3 answers

Not the organelles which are membrane-bound structures. Ribosomes are cell parts that aren't organelles, and they are found in bacteria. Protein-making essentials, they are.

2007-04-16 01:13:54 · answer #1 · answered by ecolink 7 · 0 0

The cheek cellular is a eukaryote, this is by way of fact a eukaryotic cellular is a cellular which includes a nucleus. Prokaryotes do no longer incorporate a cellular nucleus and are standard of micro organism, the DNA quite lies interior the cytoplasm of the cellular. the reality that cheek cells are eukaryotic enables police and forensic scientists to take swabs of a criminal's cheek to construct a DNA profile.

2016-12-26 09:49:53 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

No. With very few exceptions, bacteria do do not have internal membrane-bound structures. It is one of the characteristics used to distinguish prokaryotes from eukaryotes

2007-04-16 00:43:22 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

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