How are bacterial cells different from fungal and plant cells?

A bacterial cell: 1) has a cell wall consisting of murein, 2) it lacks a formed nucleus, 3) no membrane organelles, 4) a special membrane invagination system – the mesosome, 5) the presence of plasmids, 6) sporulation in order to survive the adverse effect of the surrounding Wednesday, 7) there is no mitosis and meiosis, only division in two, or budding.
Plant cell: 1) there is cellulose in the cell wall, 2) a formed nucleus with a nucleolus, 3) the presence of one- and two-membrane organelles (Golgi complex, EPS, mitochondria, plastids), 4) the absence of plasmids, 5) sporulation for reproduction, 6) Division by mitosis and meiosis.



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