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How is a yeast cell different from an onion skin cell?

Yeast has chloroplasts. The onion skin cell doesn't have chloroplasts.


Yeast lacks a cell membrane. An onion skin cell has a cell membrane.


Yeast can reproduce by budding. Onion cells do not reproduce by budding.


Yeast lacks a membrane-bound nucleus. The onion skin cell has one.

((25 points, please help))

User Farnabaz
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2 Answers

3 votes

Answer:

the onion skin has a wall

User Evgeniy Tkachenko
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Answer:

Yeast doesn't have a cell wall. The onion skin cell has a cell wall

Step-by-step explanation:

An onion is a multicellular (consisting of many cells) plant organism. Peculiar to all plant cells, the cell of an onion peel consists of a cell wall, cell membrane, cytoplasm, nucleus and a large vacuole. The nucleus is present at the periphery of the cytoplasm.

-The vacuole is prominent and present at the center of the cell. It is surrounded by cytoplasm. The presence of a cell wall and a large vacuole are indicators that help identify plant cells, such as seen in the onion peel.

As seen in bacterial cells, yeast cells have cytoplasm and a membrane surrounded by a cell wall that lacks cellulose, like those of plants. Yeast cells have a nucleus.They are smaller than animal and plant cells, but slightly larger than bacteria.

User Bubunyo Nyavor
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