DNA is copied by proteins in the nucleus, which is not technically considered to be an organelle. DNA never leaves the nucleus, so it never interacts with the organelles.
In eukaryotic cells which organelle contains DNA?
Mitochondria. Technically, the nucleus also is an organelle that also contains DNA from the mother.
The organelle that contains our DNA with all of our genetic information is the nucleus.
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.
No. DNA is store in the nucleus which is an organelle but the DNA specifically is not considered an organelle
gene is not an organelle but is a fragment of DNA with a specific expression or product in cell funtion
Replication! 1) DNA splits 2) DNA copies 3) left with 2 copies of DNA! :)
The nucleus is the organelle that contains the cells DNA.
In eukaryotic cells which organelle contains DNA?
In a multicellular organism, the Nucleus contains the DNA but in unicellular beings, the DNA just floats in it.
Mitochondria. Technically, the nucleus also is an organelle that also contains DNA from the mother.
The organelle that contains our DNA with all of our genetic information is the nucleus.
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.
Mitochondria are the organelle that have their own DNA, which is inherited through the maternal line (from mother to child).
it copies a code from the DNA