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monday september 8th a group of students studied four different cell sp…

Question

monday september 8th
a group of students studied four different cell specimens under a microscope and recorded information about their cell...
characteristics of four cell specimens

cell specimencell wallcell membranechromosomesdna in nucleus
cell 2noyesnoyes
cell 3yesyesnono
cell 4noyesnoyes

which cell specimen is a prokaryote?
(a) cell 1
(b) cell 2
(c) cell 3
(d) cell 4

the presence of which structure helps classify an organism as eul...?
(a) nucleus
(b) cell wall
(c) flagellum
(d) chromosome

Explanation:

Response
First Question (Which cell specimen is a prokaryote?):
Brief Explanations

Prokaryotes lack a nucleus (no chromosomes in a nucleus, i.e., "DNA in Nucleus" is No) and have a cell wall (usually) and cell membrane. Let's analyze each cell:

  • Cell 1: DNA in Nucleus is Yes (eukaryote feature), so not prokaryote.
  • Cell 2: DNA in Nucleus is Yes (eukaryote feature), so not prokaryote.
  • Cell 3: DNA in Nucleus is No (prokaryote feature), has cell wall and cell membrane, no chromosomes in nucleus—matches prokaryote.
  • Cell 4: DNA in Nucleus is Yes (eukaryote feature), so not prokaryote.
Brief Explanations

Eukaryotic cells are defined by having a nucleus (where DNA is in chromosomes within the nucleus). Prokaryotes lack a nucleus. Cell wall (B) is present in some prokaryotes (bacteria) and eukaryotes (plants/fungi). Flagellum (C) is present in some prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Chromosomes (D) are present in both (prokaryotes have circular chromosomes in cytoplasm, eukaryotes in nucleus). Only nucleus (A) is unique to eukaryotes for classification.

Answer:

C. Cell 3

Second Question (The presence of which structure helps classify an organism as eukaryotic?):