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im studying for my bioogy finaly that im gonna have tommrow morning.

1) How do bacterial cells differ from eukaryotic cells?
2) where are the amino acids in the cytoplasm transported by tRNA?
3) Which feature of water explains why water has high surface tension?

2007-02-01 19:51:53 · 3 answers · asked by Roger R 2 in Science & Mathematics Biology

3 answers

1) in the way they reproduce

2) into the nucleus (sometimes, depends which species)

3) water binds together, at a molecular level as it is a liquid compound. The more water, the greater the tension (usually)

You'll need much more detail on your "bioogy finaly" than there is space here for. And you might get points off for putting letters in the wrong place.

2007-02-01 20:53:29 · answer #1 · answered by dude 5 · 1 0

Unlike the eukaryotic cells, bacteria do not have a membrane enclosed nucleus

tRNA:Transports amino acids floating in the cytoplasm to ribosomes for protein synthesis

'Hydrogen bonding' is the reason for the high surface tension of water.

2007-02-02 04:14:16 · answer #2 · answered by Shannyn 5 · 2 0

1. they do not have a nucleus, have peptidoglycan in their cell walls, they are smaller, they have smaller ribosomes, they have DNA that is simpler that DNA of eukaryotic cells

2. to the ribosome to be assembled into proteins.

2007-02-02 10:09:38 · answer #3 · answered by smith5470 1 · 0 0

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