Biology, asked by himankgarg07, 7 months ago

what is prokaryotic counterpart of Eukaryotic nucleus and mitochondria. Explain ​

Answers

Answered by anantrathi14
6

Answer:

Prokaryotic counterpart of  Nucleus is nucleoid

And for creating ATP they do it on their cell membrane surface

Explanation:

Answered by Harshitm077
2

Answer:

As compared to the Eukaryotic nucleus and mitochondria, these prokaryotic cells don't have both of them, only they usually contain the free-flowing genetic material rather than the complete DNA which is commonly found in eukaryotes though. It contains only nucleoids along with plasmids which are separated from their main DNA and they gain and release energy via cytoplasm only as main counterparts of mitochondria in eukaryotes and pili, fimbriae, and flagellum were also used as counterparts for both conjugation and locomotion purposes as compared to their cilia in eukaryotes.

Explanation:

Prokaryotic cells allude to existence well before nuclei. That term relates to those microorganism cells that lacks a nuclear membrane, encapsulating their genetic material (DNA).  Some bacteria constitute prokaryotic cells, which emerged many years ago.

Eukaryotic cells, on the other hand, entail the existence of a true nucleus, that divides its DNA first from cytoplasm as well as other components in the micro-organism cells. Most cells in plants and animals are eukaryotic, having originated after the prokaryotic bacterium. This represents a refinement of the unicellular organism mechanisms, which is one of the reasons for a such huge assortment of eukaryotes.

More about the differences b/w Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic cells - https://brainly.in/question/48983693

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