You must have Dr. Gay, or they use standard tests! The only idea I have is BACTERIA because all eukaryotes have histones, so that would rule out plants and animals.
Bacteria :)
Prion.
Genetic material is DNA and/or RNA, depending on the organism. The DNA may sometimes have proteins that compress it into a small volume.
yes. it even goes more molecular than that. all proteins inside the cell contain genetic material that "tell them" what to do. though for proteins the DNA codes for their shape and what they do is based on that shape. just remember shape fits function
You might need to re-phrase your question. At the moment it sounds like you're talking about viruses?
it must be able to produce complete working proteins, have the ability to adapt to changes, to reolicate faithfully and they must allow for evolutionary change
The mitochondria contains a circular molecule of DNA that still codes for several proteins used by the mitochondria.
according to my calculations, the answer to this question is a single circular DNA molecule... your welcome (:
DNA is the molecule by which the genes are coding in the organism. DNA is transcribed into RNA which is then used as a template in the synthesis of proteins.
proteins !
Proteins
Amino acids are the building blocks of proteins.
Genes code for proteins
Their own set of genetic material still capable of coding for a few proteins which these organelles use. In a circular form that indicates their bacterial origins.
proteins.
Proteins.
proteins
carbohydrates and proteins.