In eukaryotic cells it is the nucleus that contains DNA. In prokaryotes it floats around in the cytoplasm
The nucleus is often referred to as the 'brain' of a cell, because this is where the DNA is found. The instructions for the production of functional products are contained within the nucleus, and so it is responsible for a large part of a cell's activities.
Mitochondria. Their surplus is used by the rest of the cell.
Yes, a eukaryotic cell contains Deoxyribonucleicacid (DNA) in the nucleus of the cell. If the cell has a nucleus, that's where you'll find the DNA. The only cells without a nucleus are Prokaryotes.
Eukaryotic cells make up both animal and plant cells. All cells have many things in common: the cell membrane and organelles. Most cells have an organelle called the nucleus. Cells vary in size, vary in shape and are measured in micrometers.
The structure within a cell that fits this description is likely an organelle. Organelles are specialized structures that perform specific functions within a cell, such as the nucleus, mitochondria, and endoplasmic reticulum. They are typically enclosed by a membrane that separates their internal environment from the rest of the cell.
nucleus
The nucleus is the organelle that contains the DNA in a eukaryotic cell. It is surrounded by a nuclear membrane that separates the DNA from the rest of the cell's components, allowing for proper regulation and protection of the genetic material.
The nucleus is the cell's control center. It contains genetic material which allows the nucleus to control the chemical reactions taking place in the cytoplasm. The nucleus is also responsible for cell reproduction.
it is the control centre of a cell. it contains DNA. the rest isn't particularly important.
Mitochondrion
Cell membrane, cytoplasm, nucleus, vacuoles, endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria, cell wall, chloroplasts. The spelling might be wrong but the rest is correct :)
Eukaryotes are surrounded by a double-membrane bound organelle called the nucleus, which contains the cell's genetic material (DNA). The nucleus is separated from the rest of the cell by a nuclear envelope.
The mitochondria are the organelles that carry out aerobic cellular respiration. The initial step, glycolysis, occurs in the cytoplasm, but the rest takes place in the mitochondria. Mitochondria occur in all eukaryotic cells, not just animal cells.
The nucleus is often referred to as the 'brain' of a cell, because this is where the DNA is found. The instructions for the production of functional products are contained within the nucleus, and so it is responsible for a large part of a cell's activities.
The nucleus contains most of the DNA in a cell and this DNA is called the chromosomal DNA. It is separated from the rest of the cell by a double layer of membrane. The mitochondria also contain DNA, called the mitochondrial DNA.
Toucans are eukaryotes, so the same organelles you have would be in their cells. Nucleus, endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi body, ribosomes ( not membrane bound ) and all the rest of the membrane bound organelles.
Mitochondria. Their surplus is used by the rest of the cell.