No. The DNA is copied by ribosomes in the endoplasmic reticulum to form the RNA strands.
RNA can leave the Nucleus.
Yes, RNA can leave the nucleus.
RNA is transcripted in the nucleus.
RNA is made in the nucleus to bring instructions out to the ribosomes so a protein can be made.
Nucleus is built by many things.Not only with RNA.
RNA is located in the nucleus of a cell, specifically in the nucleolus and nucleoplasm.
RNA is found in the nucleus in the form of messenger RNA (mRNA), which carries the genetic information from DNA to the ribosomes in the cytoplasm for protein synthesis. RNA is also found in the nucleus as transfer RNA (tRNA) and ribosomal RNA (rRNA) which are involved in protein synthesis within the cell.
RNA is transcribed in the nucleus by an enzyme called RNA polymerase, using DNA as a template. The RNA is then processed, modified, and transported out of the nucleus for translation into proteins.
Messenger RNA - also known as mRNA, travels fro the nucleus out into the cell where it is used to make protein. It carries the message by transcripting from DNA and is sent to the ribosome to be translated. The RNA is a strand of nucleic acid that contains the specific genes that are needed by the ribosomes. The DNA always stays in the nucleus, so it makes RNA to control the ribosomes.Messenger RNA
in eukaryotes, RNA is synthetised in the nucleus from DNA, using RNA-polymerase. in prokaryotes, RNA is synthetised in the cytoplasm (DNA has no nucleus), using RNA-polymerase as well.
Yes, RNA is able to leave the cell nucleus.
Messenger RNA (mRNA) is the type of RNA that is transcribed in the nucleus and then travels to the cytoplasm for protein synthesis.