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No, viruses are neither prokaryotic nor eukaryotic - they are non-living and can't be classified as a biological organism.
The four domains are eukaryotes, bacteria, Archaea, and viruses.
DNA(deoxyribonucleicacid) and cell membrane
Cyanobacteria
all viruses and fungi can be contracted by walking barefoot in damp areas
Viruses are neither prokaryotes nor eukaryotes as they are not living cells and do not have cell structure. They are parasites of living cells.
Bacteria are prokaryotes, viruses are not classified within the six kingdoms of life, and so are neither prokaryotes nor eukaryotes.
The four domains are eukaryotes, bacteria, Archaea, and viruses.
Bacteria are prokaryotes. Viruses are not living organisms, virus is a virus, that is all.
There all eukaryotic and yes the viruses spread fast and duplicate by the bundle.
No, viruses are neither prokaryotic nor eukaryotic - they are non-living and can't be classified as a biological organism.
The four domains are eukaryotes, bacteria, Archaea, and viruses.
They use a different mechanism: RNAi short of RNA interference, cleaves the virus genome (usually double stranded RNA) and destroys any strand that is complementary to the viral genome. -eukaryotic viruses are usually RNA viruses so they eukaryotes don't really restriction enzymes to protect against viruses.
No. AIDS is a retrovirus that affects humans, who are eukaryotes. Rhinoviruses cause the common cold. The list could go on.
Macro viruses
the flu
ribosomes