Ribosomes are found in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells and are not bound by a membrane.
Ribosomes are the safe answer.
Yes, prokaryotes have a plasma membrane.
No, prokaryotes do not have a double membrane in their cells.
No, prokaryotes do not have membrane-bound organelles.
No, prokaryotes do not contain membrane-bound organelles.
An example of a eukaryote is a human cell. Eukaryotes are cells that have a nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles. These organisms can be unicellular or multicellular and are distinct from prokaryotes, which lack a true nucleus.
Yes, prokaryotes lack membrane-bound organelles.
They are both living organisms.They both have cell membrane. Most prokaryotes and some eukaryotes are also surrounded by the cell wall, although the makeup of the cell wall differs on the type.They both have ribosomes, although prokaryotic ribosomes are different from eukaryotic ribosomes.They both have DNA. In eukaryotes, they are surrounded by nuclear membrane. In prokaryotes, they are suspended in the nucleoid region.
well, firstly there are two main types of cells, the Prokryotes and the Eukaryotes. Prokaryotes are simple cells, often single celled organisms are Prokaryotes. Eukarotes are more complex cells and have membrane bound organells (such as Mitochondrium and ribosomes). so to answer your question, all calls have a cytoplasm, however, only Eukaryote cells have a nuclues. Hayden Dugmore.
DNA in a eukaryote is surrounded by a nuclear membrane, hence forming a distinct nucleus whereas the DNA in a prokaryote is not bounded by a nuclear membrane and floats freely in the cytoplasm.
no thats what prokaryotes means - "before nucleus"
yes it is found in prokaryotes as it has no membrane to cover it and the prokaryotic cell or prokaryotes lack just membrane bounded organelles and it performs the same function as in eukaryotes