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All I know is that a nucleus stores the molecule DNA.
the nucleus
No, DNA does not exist as a single chromosome in most organisms. Instead, DNA is typically organized into multiple chromosomes within the nucleus of a cell.
The nucleus contains DNA. The DNA is found in the nucleus.
In eukaryotes, DNA is located on the chromosomes in the cell nucleus. In prokaryotes, DNA is located on a single chromosome in the cell cytoplasm.
Prokaryotes don't have a nucleus - their DNA is floating free in the cell cytoplasm. in other words they lack a Nucleus
In a eukaryotic cell, the chromosomes are located inside the nucleus. For a prokaryote, the single, circular chromosome is in the cytoplasm.
mRNA DNA is transcribed into mRNA by RNA polymerase II in the nucleus and then mRNA is translated into proteins by ribosomes in the cytoplasm.
It probobly falters and dies. It's like its DNA...
The DNA in a single cheek cell is typically around 1.8 meters long when fully extended. To fit into the nucleus, this long DNA strand is tightly packaged and coiled around proteins to form chromatin. This allows the DNA to be efficiently stored and organized within the limited space of the nucleus.
The nucleus contains most of the DNA in a cell and this DNA is called the chromosomal DNA. It is separated from the rest of the cell by a double layer of membrane. The mitochondria also contain DNA, called the mitochondrial DNA.
Transcription (DNA -> RNA) happens in the nucleus where RNA polymerase makes single-stranded RNA from a template DNA strand.