Yes. It is in the nucleus where it must be assembled to form mRNA.
No. A plant cell is a eukaryote, because it has a nucleus
nucleoid region, for those who happen to say nucleus, bacteria cells don't have a nucleus so this is in fact impossible.
DNA
Cyanobacteria are prokaryotes. They lack a membrane-bound nucleus and other organelles commonly found in eukaryotic cells.
Actually, if a cell contains a nucleus, it is a eukaryote, not a prokaryote. Eukaryotic cells have a well-defined nucleus that houses the genetic material. Prokaryotic cells, on the other hand, do not contain a nucleus and their genetic material is found in the cytoplasm.
They are in cytoplasm and on endoplasmic reticulumn.Also found in mitochondria and chloroplasts
Yes, it has a nucleus and organelles not found in prokaryotic cells
In eukaryote cells attached to the cell's nucleus. Surrounds it, so to speak.
A eukaryote cell is any cell with a true nucleus, meaning every single cell found in animals, plants, and fungi are eukaryotic. So, no, there are millions of types of eukaryote cells.
Eukaryote
Eukaryotic cells have a cell membrane, cytoplasm, and a nucleus. These cells are typically found in organisms such as animals, plants, fungi, and protists. The nucleus contains the cell's genetic material and is separated from the cytoplasm by a nuclear membrane.
Mostly the ribosomes. Or you could say the cytoplasm.
No. A plant cell is a eukaryote, because it has a nucleus
All I know is that a nucleus stores the molecule DNA.
Organisms with cells that have a nucleus and membrane-bound organelles are called eukaryotes. Eukaryotic cells are found in plants, animals, fungi, and protists. The presence of a nucleus separates them from prokaryotic cells, which do not have a nucleus.
nucleoid region, for those who happen to say nucleus, bacteria cells don't have a nucleus so this is in fact impossible.
the anwer is anmal cells or short i dont know the technical name right off the top of my head