With the exception of bacteria cells, hereditary material is held in the cell's nucleus.
The Nucleolus of the Nucleus in any eukaryotic cell contains the hereditary material. While, prokaryotic cells hereditary material is located within the cell membrane floating freely in the cytoplasm.
The hereditary material in a cell is deoxyribnucleaic acid (DNA).
Bacteriophages (phages) attach to bacteria and inject their genetic material (either DNA or RNA) into the bacterial cell. This genetic material then takes over the bacterial cell's machinery, forcing it to produce more phages and ultimately leading to the destruction of the bacterium.
A bacteriophage attaches to a bacterium and injects its genetic material into the bacterial cell. This genetic material then uses the bacterial host's machinery to replicate and produce more phages, eventually leading to the lysis of the host cell.
in the nucleus..... teacher tawght us... thanks mr betzelberger
With the exception of bacteria cells, hereditary material is held in the cell's nucleus.
With the exception of bacteria cells, hereditary material is held in the cell's nucleus.
With the exception of bacteria cells, hereditary material is held in the cell's nucleus.
Hereditary material is held in the nucleus of non-bacterial cells.
Hereditary material is held in the nucleus of non-bacterial cells.
In eukaryotic cells, the hereditary material is held in the nucleus. The nucleus is a membrane-bound organelle that houses the cell's DNA.
In a bacterial cell, the genetic material is just floating in the cytoplasm in a region called the necleoid. There are no membranes surrounding it.
a cell's hereditary material is DNA
The hereditary material of the cell is the DNA.
DNA
DNA
DNA