In Prokaryotes like bacteria DNA is in the form of clusters of chromosomes and in eukaryotes DNA is concentrated in the nucleus as they have it .
In Prokaryotes like bacteria DNA is in the form of clusters of chromosomes and in eukaryotes DNA is concentrated in the nucleus as they have it .
dna in eukaryotes is located in the nucleus
Neurospora is a eukaryote. Eukaryotes have membrane-bound organelles, including a nucleus, while prokaryotes do not.
DNA prokariyotes is circular. Eukariyotes have linear shape.
Archaea and Eukaryote are two different domains from the three domains of life classification. And Prokaryotes belong to two domains: the bacteria and the archaea.
In Prokaryotes like bacteria DNA is in the form of clusters of chromosomes and in eukaryotes DNA is concentrated in the nucleus as they have it .
In Prokaryotes like bacteria DNA is in the form of clusters of chromosomes and in eukaryotes DNA is concentrated in the nucleus as they have it .
In Prokaryotes like bacteria DNA is in the form of clusters of chromosomes and in eukaryotes DNA is concentrated in the nucleus as they have it .
In Prokaryotes like bacteria DNA is in the form of clusters of chromosomes and in eukaryotes DNA is concentrated in the nucleus as they have it .
DNA in prokaryotes is circular and in the cell itself, while the DNA of eukaryotes is coiled and in the nucleus (organelle) of the cell.
DNA in prokaryotes is circular and in the cell itself, while the DNA of eukaryotes is coiled and in the nucleus (organelle) of the cell.
dna
It is in both.But structure is different
DNA in a eukaryote is surrounded by a nuclear membrane, hence forming a distinct nucleus whereas the DNA in a prokaryote is not bounded by a nuclear membrane and floats freely in the cytoplasm.
the DNA of a prokaryote is a long ,circular molecule.the DNA pf a eukaryote ,the nucleus holds the cell's DNA.
No. Plasmids are special circular DNA structure that is only found in prokaryotes.
Yes, that is how the eukaryote domain is distinguished from prokaryotes such as bacteria and archaea.