There is no such thing called a DNA nucleus. I assume you mean DNA found in the nucleus. The DNA that's found in the nucleus are many DNA strands all bunched up.
Chromatins are made up of DNA strands
DNA strands are packed into structures called chromosomes. Chromosomes are made up of long strands of DNA that are tightly coiled and condensed to fit inside the nucleus of a cell.
The nucleus contains chromosomes which contain strands of DNA.
The nucleus contains thin strands of DNA known as chromatin. Chromatin is made up of DNA and proteins, and it packages the DNA to fit inside the nucleus of a cell.
old is broken but new is not
DNA is copied in the cell nucleus during a process called DNA replication. This process involves the separation of the DNA strands, the synthesis of new complementary strands, and the formation of two identical copies of the original DNA molecule.
chromatin
Strands of genetic material floating in the nucleus is chromatin. Cytoplasm is the part of the cell that is between the cell membrane and the nucleus.
The strands of genetic material floating in the nucleus are chromatin. Chromatin is the combination of DNA that makes up the nucleus of the cell.
Strands of DNA become chromosomes, which are located in the nucleus.
All cells store DNA and direct itself to do cell activities that it normally would do. The nucleus is what stores the DNA and directs cell activities, but it is not a cell. The nucleus is an organelle.
In a cell, the tangles of long strands of DNA form the