They have 80s ribosomes.Prokariyotes have 70s ribosomes
Naturally, all eukaryotic organisms, unicellular and multicellular, contain ribosomes. Even eukaryotic microorganisms require ribosomes for life because ribosomes are essential in the process of gene expression.
Ribosomes are made in the nucleolus of the eukaryotic cell. About 10,000 ribosomes are produced in a minute by the nucleolus.
Cells are not found in ribosomes. Ribosomes are found in (eukaryotic) cells.
The terms eukaryotic and prokaryotic only apply to cells - ribosomes themselves aren't cells. Ribosomes are parts of cells, which can be either prokaryotic or eukaryotic.
The terms eukaryotic and prokaryotic only apply to cells - ribosomes themselves aren't cells. Ribosomes are parts of cells, which can be either prokaryotic or eukaryotic.
Eukaryotic
Ribosomes
Whereas the prokaryotic translation occurs on seventy ribosomes, the eukaryotic translation occurs on 80 ribosomes. The prokaryotic translation is a continuous process while the eukaryotic is a discontinuous process.
NO
Whereas the prokaryotic translation occurs on seventy ribosomes, the eukaryotic translation occurs on 80 ribosomes. The prokaryotic translation is a continuous process while the eukaryotic is a discontinuous process.
no. all cells have ribosomes, DNA, and a cell membrane. that is all that prokaryotic cells have. eukaryotic cells have everything else too.
ribosomes are not cells, they are organelles that produce and synthesize proteins. get it straight!