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What is the difference between prokaryotes and eukaryotes?
Answer:
Prokaryotic cells do not have a pre-defined nucleus. The chromosomes in prokaryotes are dispersed in the cytoplasm. In eukaryotes, the chromosomes remain intact inside the nucleus and there is a conspicuous nuclear membrane surrounding the nucleus.
Another difference is that, there is cytoplasmic movement in prokaryotes, whereas there is no cytoplasmic movement in eukaryotes.
Prokaryotic: also no membrane-covered organelles, has circular DNA and bacteria, Eukaryotic: membrane-covered organelles, linear DNA and all other cells. Prokaryotic as a group is the most metabolically diverse. Eukaryotic makes many histones, a type of protein that structurally stabilizes the DNA.
Another difference is that, there is cytoplasmic movement in prokaryotes, whereas there is no cytoplasmic movement in eukaryotes.
Prokaryotic: also no membrane-covered organelles, has circular DNA and bacteria, Eukaryotic: membrane-covered organelles, linear DNA and all other cells. Prokaryotic as a group is the most metabolically diverse. Eukaryotic makes many histones, a type of protein that structurally stabilizes the DNA.
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