in the nucleous.
Nucleus.
No, the cell membrane does not carry hereditary information. Hereditary information is primarily stored in the cell's nucleus in the form of DNA. The cell membrane is responsible for regulating the passage of molecules in and out of the cell.
The hereditary information of a cell is contained within the nucleus, specifically in the form of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid). DNA holds the genetic instructions necessary for the development, functioning, growth, and reproduction of all living organisms. In prokaryotic cells, which lack a defined nucleus, hereditary information is found in a region called the nucleoid.
The nucleus of a cell is surrounded and held together by the nuclear envelope. The nucleus of the cell contains hereditary information.
The hereditary information in the male reproductive cell is located in the nucleus. This information is stored in the form of DNA, which contains the genetic instructions that will be passed on to the baby.
The nucleus.
Latent Viruses: some viruses can be latent. That means that after the virus enters a cell, its hereditary material can become part of the cell's hereditary material.
lysosomes
No, hereditary information is stored in chromosomes within the cell's nucleus. Ribosomes are responsible for protein synthesis, not storage of genetic information. Each chromosome contains many genes that provide instructions for making specific proteins.
A Virus
The best answer is "No."Both animal and plant cells can have chromosomes, but chromosomes are not cells, and certainly neither plant nor animal cells.Neither, it's part of genetics, as in the cell make up/genes etc. It is part of the cell not a cell.
The genes, which are found in the nucleus, carries the hereditary characteristics of an individual. The genes are subsets of a cell's DNA.