DNA wraps around proteins to form a prokaryotic cell.
I think you are you referring to cytoplasm
Through fusion with the cell membrane, vesicles transport large molecules and material in a process called exocytosis.
The Nucleus
The ER (endoplasmic reticulum), both smooth and rough, move material within the cell
The mass of fibers found within the nucleus of the cell are called chromatins that are made of DNA, RNA and nuclear proteins.
Ribosomes within the cytosol (if they are free) or within the endoplasmic reticulum (if they are membrane bound) are responsible for making proteins.
Chromosomes
Chromosomes
The material of CHROMOSOMES. It is a complex of DNA; HISTONES; and nonhistone proteins (CHROMOSOMAL PROTEINS, NON-HISTONE) found within the nucleus of a cell.
Organelles that produce proteins used within the cell are called ribosomes. Ribosomes produce proteins that are either used within the cell or are processed in the endoplasmic reticulum.
Chromatin
Translation. It takes place within Ribosomes.
chromatin
chromatin
Chromosomes are mostly DNA not proteins, but there are small proteins that "package" and protect the DNA. These proteins are somewhat different in prokaryotes and eukaryotes:Prokaryotes do not possess nuclei. Instead, their DNA is organized into a structure called the nucleoid. This structure is, however, dynamic and is maintained and remodeled by the actions of a range of histone-like proteins, which associate with the bacterial chromosome. In archaea, the DNA in chromosomes is even more organized, with the DNA packaged within structures similar to eukaryotic nucleosomes.In the nuclear chromosomes of eukaryotes, the uncondensed DNA exists in a semi-ordered structure, where it is wrapped around histones (structural proteins), forming a composite material called chromatin.
Catalyst
In order to fit within a cell, DNA becomes more compact by wrapping tightly around associated proteins. Chromatids are duplicate halves of a chromosome.
Endoplasmic Reticulum