Water soluble molecules such as protein and RNA.
pores
Proteins, RNA, and other molecules move in and out of the cell nucleus through the pores in its membrane.
Water soluble molecules such as protein and RNA.
The molecules in between nucleus and cytoplasm are cell organelles
Molecules move between the nucleus and the cytoplasm through proteins and RNA.
The molecules in between nucleus and cytoplasm are cell organelles RNA, and other molecules move in and out of the cell nucleus through the pores.
It gets out through the nuclear pores and enters the cytoplasm.
DNA is store in nucleus to synthesize protein in cytoplasm through translation. DNA encode the information in form of triplet codons to synthesize proteins.
Because DNA never leaves the nucleus, it is in there that DNA is transcribed onto a mRNA molecule which then leave the nucleus through the nuclear pores to head out to a ribosome to be translated.
H20 molecules can pass through the membrane freely, however sucrose molecules are too large.
After mRNA leaves the nucleus, it travels to the cytoplasm.
Water soluble molecules such as protein and RNA.
It's like a communication canal, DNA is isolated inside the nucleus but RNA can leave and go into the cytoplasm where it's transcribed through the pore. Water and other molecules can also go through.
The relationship between the nucleus and rna is rather significant. Because of it, we as humans can function. Transporting RNA molecules to from the nucleus to the cytoplasm is fundamental for gene expression. The RNA produced in the nucleus is transported through the nuclear pore by export receptors. TRNAs and microRNAs bind directly to the receptors, but ribosomal RNAs and mRNAs assemble into ribonucleoprotein particles and export with specific adapter proteins. Basically, the RNA takes the information from the DNA (which is in the nucleus) to the ribosomes to make proteins,which preform our basic living needs.
It gets out through the nuclear pores and enters the cytoplasm.
DNA is store in nucleus to synthesize protein in cytoplasm through translation. DNA encode the information in form of triplet codons to synthesize proteins.
Adding a stain such as Methylene Blue while color the cell. This makes it so that not all the light passes through the cell allowing for it to be more visible. This also will stain the cytoplasm a lighter color than the nucleus so the nucleus will be very dark and obvious. -Kodie
well, there is no cytoplasm in nucleus as far as I know; there is just nucleoplasm in the nucleus. Although, sometimes, you can observe "cytoplasmic strands" which cross the nucleus; but these "strands" do not penetrate the nucleus, it is just like strands of water going through a bubble in water. plus, there is one or more "nucleolus" in the nucleus; these are formed by ribosomal RNA.
Part of the DNA molecule (gene) is transcribed into an RNA molecule that exits through the pores in Penis the nucleus. Once the RNA reaches the ribosome in the cytoplasm it translates into a protein.
Because DNA never leaves the nucleus, it is in there that DNA is transcribed onto a mRNA molecule which then leave the nucleus through the nuclear pores to head out to a ribosome to be translated.
H20 molecules can pass through the membrane freely, however sucrose molecules are too large.
m-RNA copy the information through transcription.Then m-RNA comes to cytoplasm.
mitochondria