answersLogoWhite

0

Viruses and Bacteria both have no nucleus. They are also both prokaryotes.

User Avatar

Wiki User

15y ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

What are similarities between viruses and protists?

Both harm the human body


What are the four types of pathogens?

The four type of pathogens are bacterium, protists, viruses, and fungi. Parasitic worms are NOT pathogens.


What is human pathogen?

Viruses, bacteria, protists, and parasitic worms.


What are the 5 main microbes?

bacteria viruses fungi protists


What are Five types of generalization?

bacteria. viruses. fungi. protozoa .(protists). parasites.


What is the size comparison of bacteria fungi protists and viruses?

they look kinda similar


What is the difference between protists and viruses?

Protists are eukaryotic organisms that can be unicellular or multicellular, while viruses are typically considered non-living entities that require a host cell to replicate. Protists exhibit cellular organization and are considered to be part of the biological domain Eukarya, while viruses are acellular and are not classified within any domain. Additionally, protists are capable of independent metabolic activities, while viruses rely on host cells for energy and replication.


What eats viruses?

Not sure if any bacteria/protists eat viruses, but our white blood cells definitely do. How do you think you fight a cold?


What are the five groups of pathogens?

Bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa (aka protists), parasites.


How do you think scientists classified protists when they divide all livings things into only 2 kingdoms?

They classified protists into the animal kingdom because they shared more similarities. Protists became their own kingdom in the 1830s. The protists kingdom expanded in 1845.


What is the similarities in temperate and virulent viruses?

They both require a host cell to reproduce and they are both types of viruses


What are the similarities of eukaryote prokaryote and viruses?

They all contain DNA in there genetic material