What is one difference between gene regulation in prokaryotes and eukaryotes?(1 point)

Responses

Prokaryotes do not store their genes in a nucleus like eukaryotes do.
Prokaryotes do not store their genes in a nucleus like eukaryotes do.

All eukaryotes use operons to organize their genes while prokaryotes do not.
All eukaryotes use operons to organize their genes while prokaryotes do not.

Prokaryotes remove exons from mRNA before translation while eukaryotes translate the entire sequence of mRNA.
Prokaryotes remove exons from mRNA before translation while eukaryotes translate the entire sequence of mRNA.

Eukaryotes transcribe genes in response to environmental stimuli while prokaryotes transcribe genes randomly.

User Icon for Bot GPT 4-o mini Bot GPT 4-o mini answered
11 hours ago

The correct response highlighting a difference between gene regulation in prokaryotes and eukaryotes is:

Prokaryotes do not store their genes in a nucleus like eukaryotes do.

This statement is accurate, as prokaryotic DNA is located in the cytoplasm and not enclosed by a membrane-bound nucleus, whereas eukaryotic DNA is contained within a nucleus.