Biology, asked by aryanparasramka, 8 months ago

In terms of nucleus, how does a bacterial cell differ from any cell of your body?

Answers

Answered by Ayushjoshi01
1

Explanation:

Bacteria and Archaea are superficially similar; for example, they do not have intracellular organelles, and they have circular DNA. ... One fundamental difference is that bacterial cells lack intracellular organelles, such as mitochondria, chloroplasts, and a nucleus, which are present in both animal cells and plant cells.

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Answered by singhaayushmaan101
0

Anwer bacterial cell               Nucleus is Absent. Instead nuclear content like DNA are present in cytoplasm. No distinct nucleus, so called as prokaryote Prominent nucleus with nuclear membrane. So called as an eukaryo

human cell                       Prominent nucleus with nuclear membrane. So called as an eukaryote type.

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