A vesicle in which water, nutrients, food, and other materials are stored.
A nucleic acid that carries the genetic information in the cell and is capable of self-replication and synthesis of RNA.
Organelles in the cytoplasm that break down sugar and make energy. Also called the "Power Plant of the cell."
In eukaryotic cells, it is the last stage of mitosis where the chromosomes are pulled to different sides and a nuclear membrane begins to form around each of the 2 new daughter cells.
A cell with no nucleus (bacteria).
One of two cylindrical cellular structures that are composed of nine triplet microtubules and form the asters during mitosis.
Small particles found free floating or attached to Rough ER whose function is to create new proteins from mRNA.
A complex of parallel, flattened sacs, vesicles, and vacuoles that lies adjacent to the nucleus of a cell and is concerned with packaging and delivering new cellular molecules (sugars, proteins, lipids).
The semipermeable membrane that encloses the cytoplasm of a cell.
The rigid outermost cell layer found in plants and certain algae, bacteria, and fungi but usually absent from animal cells.
The organelle that digests food particles, wastes, cells parts, and foreign invaders.
The smallest structural unit of an organism that is capable of independent functioning, consisting of one or more nuclei, cytoplasm, and various organelles, all surrounded by a semipermeable cell membrnae.