No! Only the nucleus!
It is found in the nucleus. the nucleus is the brain of the cell
The main DNA in the cell is found in the nucleus. DNA is also found in two other organelles - the mitochondria and the chloroplasts.
Phosphate in not an element, it is not the only element found in DNA, and is found in other places.
DNA can be found inside the nucleus of every cell, except for red blood cells. Small amounts of DNA can also be found in mitochondria.
DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) is the 'language' that genes are 'written in'. The DNA in the nucleus composes the genome (complete set of genes) of the organism to which the cell belongs. Thus the human genome is the genome of the DNA within the nucleus of human cells. But DNA, in plants and other photosynthetic eukaryotes, is found composing a completely different genome within the chloroplasts. And in most eukaryotes including animals, plants and fungi, their is also a separate mitochondrial genome composed from DNA in the mitochondria. The theory of endosymbiosis explains the presence of DNA in mitochondria and chloroplasts.
Strands of DNA become chromosomes, which are located in the nucleus.
If it is a Eukaryotic cell you can find DNA in:1) Nucleus2) Mitochondria3) Chloroplast if it is a plant cellIf it is a prokaryotic cell then all DNA is found in the cytoplasm
DNA is mainly found in the nucleus of the cell. Of course, it can also be found in other organelles such as the mitochondria (therefore it is called mitochondrial DNA).
DNA is stored in the chromosomes, which are found in the cell nucleus.
It is found in the nucleus, inside the mitochondria.
nucleus of the cell.
DNA is stored in the chromosomes, which are found in the cell nucleus.