Biology, asked by ItzAdityaKarn, 2 months ago

how is a prokaryotic cell different from a Eukaryotic cell​

Answers

Answered by rishit015
1

Answer:

All life on Earth consists of either eukaryotic cells or prokaryotic cells. Prokaryotes were the first form of life. Scientists believe that eukaryotes evolved from prokaryotes around 2.7 billion years ago.

The primary distinction between these two types of organisms is that eukaryotic cells have a membrane-bound nucleus and prokaryotic cells do not. The nucleus is where eukaryotes store their genetic information. In prokaryotes, DNA is bundled together in the nucleoid region, but it is not stored within a membrane-bound nucleus.

The nucleus is only one of many membrane-bound organelles in eukaryotes. Prokaryotes, on the other hand, have no membrane-bound organelles. Another important difference is the DNA structure. Eukaryote DNA consists of multiple molecules of double-stranded linear DNA, while that of prokaryotes is double-stranded and circular.

Answered by T3TDrago
0

Answer:

prokaryotic cell- a type of cell that lacks a well defined nucleus and other organelles due to internal membranes. Example- bacteria

Eukaryotic cells- a type of cell that contains a well defined nucleus and all the organelles including the membranes. Example-human cell

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