Asked by Void<3
What is one difference between gene regulation in prokaryotes and eukaryotes?(1 point)
Responses
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.
Prokaryotes do not store their genes in a nucleus like eukaryotes do.
Prokaryotes do not store their genes in a nucleus like eukaryotes do.
Eukaryotes transcribe genes in response to environmental stimuli while prokaryotes transcribe genes randomly.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
"Prokaryotes do not store their genes in a nucleus like eukaryotes do."
Explanation: prokaryotes lack a membrane-bound nucleus (DNA is in a nucleoid), so transcription and translation can be coupled; eukaryotes have a nucleus and more complex nuclear-level regulation (chromatin, splicing, enhancers).
Explanation: prokaryotes lack a membrane-bound nucleus (DNA is in a nucleoid), so transcription and translation can be coupled; eukaryotes have a nucleus and more complex nuclear-level regulation (chromatin, splicing, enhancers).
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