The tangled threadlike materials inside the nucleus are known as chromatin. This is what represents the form that DNA takes when it is not undergoing division.
chromatin
chromatin
Genes are arranged on twisted strands called DNA. DNA is housed in the nucleus and controls the cells functions and systems.
DNA comes in four bases: Cytosine, guanine, adenine, and thymine. The Cytosine and guanine always go together, and adenine and thymine go together. They are hooked up to a phosphate base, and right on top and underneath is a sugar base. They hook up to form DNA.
nucleus nucleus
A+ through nuclear pores
The nucleus
The strands of genetic material floating in the nucleus are chromatin. Chromatin is the combination of DNA that makes up the nucleus of the cell.
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.
The strands of genetic material floating in the nucleus are chromatin. Chromatin is the combination of DNA that makes up the nucleus of the cell.
There is no such thing called a DNA nucleus. I assume you mean DNA found in the nucleus. The DNA that's found in the nucleus are many DNA strands all bunched up.
the strands are a lot tinier than the nucleus of a cheek cell
Chromatin
chromatin
The nucleus hangs by cytoplasmic strands in a spirogyra cell.
Chromatin
nucleus
Strands of genetic material floating in the nucleus is chromatin. Cytoplasm is the part of the cell that is between the cell membrane and the nucleus.