RNA is made in the nucleus to bring instructions out to the ribosomes so a protein can be made.
The largest amount of RNA in a cell can be found in the nucleus, where most of the cell's genetic material is stored and transcribed into RNA molecules. This includes messenger RNA (mRNA) that carries instructions for protein synthesis, as well as other types of RNA involved in various cellular processes.
RNA polymerase is the enzyme responsible for synthesizing RNA strands during transcription in a cell. It reads the DNA template strand and adds complementary RNA nucleotides to form an RNA strand.
Ribosmes are what make the protiens for the cell the DNA or Rna to be made
The main function of RNA in the cell is to carry genetic information from the DNA in the cell's nucleus to the ribosomes, where it is used to make proteins through a process called protein synthesis.
They have genetic materials. They have DNA or RNA
Transcription
RNA molecules are basically a cheap, yet reliable copy of your cell's DNA. To understand why RNA molecules are needed, you must first know that DNA is very precious. It is the only copy of instructions you cell has. Without it, everything your cells do would cease to happen, and your cells would shut down. Because it's so precious, DNA can't leave the protection of the nucleus, because there's too great a risk that it would be hurt. So, it makes a generic but identical copy of itself into RNA, which can travel unharmed throughout the cell. Once copied, RNA travels though the cell to places like your ribosomes, and tells them how to put together amino acids in order to make proteins, the building blocks of your cell.
There are many different kinds of RNA manufactured in a cell. Messenger RNA (mRNA) is produced to take the information contained in a specific segment of DNA and then use it to make proteins. Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) is part of a large RNA protein complex called the ribosome that binds mRNA and joins amino acids to make a protein. Transfer RNA (tRNA) brings amino acids to the ribosome and ensures that the amino acid used is in the order specified by mRNA. Many other kinds of RNA are also present in a cell. RNA plays an important role in the proper functioning of a cell.
No, RNA is not typically located in the nucleus of a cell. RNA is primarily found in the cytoplasm of a cell, where it plays a key role in protein synthesis.
Because it doesn't use it's DNA or RNA to function, it uses it to inject into a cell and switch the cell's instructions to its own so the cell will make more viruses. Cells have DNA and RNA to tell the cell what to do, but viruses just do it naturally. Viruses have no use for both.
The ribosomes take instructions from the RNA to make protiens.
The mRNA may not transcribe the DNA code correctly, causing a mutation.