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Difference between Animal and Plant Cells
Key difference: Animal cells do not have rigid cell walls and chloroplasts, and they have
smaller vacuoles. Plant cells have a rigid cell wall and chloroplasts and have a large central
vacuole.
Cells are the smallest unit of life and are microscopic in nature, which means that they can’t be seen with
the naked eye. Cells were discovered in 1665 by Robert Hooke and were named for the small “cells”
(rooms) in a monastery. There are two types of cells, the prokaryotic cells and the eukaryotic cells. The
prokaryotic cells are self-sufficient in nature, such as bacteria and archaea. On the other hand, the cells of
all multi-cellular beings are eukaryotic cells. Both the animal cells and plant cells are eukaryotic cells, but
they have different structures.
The main difference between an animal cell and a plant cell is that, plant cells have a cell wall, which the
animal cell lacks. The cell wall which is made up of cellulose gives the plant cell rigidity resulting in a
fixed, rectangular shape. Animal cells lack the rigidity hence, they tend to have a round and irregular
shape. Animal cells tend to vary greatly in appearance. The cell wall allows high pressure to build inside
of the plant cell without bursting. Due to this, the plant cell is able to accept large amounts of liquid
through osmosis without bursting. Animal cells, which only have a thin membrane restricting access to the
cell, tend to burst if they absorb too much extra water.
Both animal cells and plant cells have a defined nucleus, which contains chromosomes. The nucleus is
protected and surrounded by cytoplasm, a watery or gel-like liquid that holds all the organelles in place.
The cytoplasm, in turn is held in by the cell membrane.
However, all animal cells have centrioles whereas only some lower plant forms have it. Also, plant cells
tend to have one large central vacuole that can take up to 90% of cell volume. Animal cells tend to have
one or more small vacuoles. Vacuoles contain waste materials, water, and nutrients that can be used or
secreted as necessary. In plant cells, vacuoles store water and maintain turgidity of the cell. In animal
cells, they store water, ions and waste.
Another difference among them is that plant cells have chloroplasts for photosynthesis, which allows them
to covert sunlight into food for the cell. Chloroplasts have its own DNA and tend to direct their own work.
Animal cells lack chloroplasts and hence this ability, which is why we can’t live off of sunlight, sadly.
Further comparison between animal cells and plant cells:
Animal Cell
Plant Cell
Type of cell
Eukaryotic
Eukaryotic
Cell walls
No cell walls
Rigid cell walls
Shape
Round (irregular shape)
Rectangular (fixed shape)
Organelles
Cell membrane
Nuclear membrane
One or more small vacuoles
Centrioles
Cytoplasm
Endoplasmic Reticulum
Ribosomes
Mitochondria
Golgi Apparatus Microtubules/
Microfilaments
Flagella in some cells
Lysosomes
Nucleus
Cilia
DNA
Cell membrane
Cell wall
Nuclear membrane
Plasmodesma
Large Vacuole
Plastids
Chloroplast
Leucoplast
Chromoplast
Golgi Bodies
Ribosome
Endoplasmic reticulum
Mitochondria
Lysosome
Cytoplasm
Nucleus
DNA
Chromatin
RNA
Cytoskeleton
Nucleolus