Prokaryotic & Eukaryotic Cells
Cells can be divided into two categories: prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. Prokaryotic cells are significantly smaller than eukaryotic cells. This size difference is due to the many contents inside a eukaryotic cell that prokaryotic cells do not have. To begin with, prokaryotic cells are always going to be unicellular, while eukaryotic cells can also be unicellular but are many times multicellular (Murray & Baron, 2007). Prokaryotic cells do not have any membrane-bound organelles inside them, such as the nucleus, mitochondria, or lysosome as eukaryotic cells do. The DNA of eukaryotic cells is linear and is contained within the nucleus, while DNA in prokaryotic cells is circular and is contained within the nuclear body, a non-membrane surrounded structure (Murray & Baron, 2007). The number of ribosomes inside a prokaryotic cell is a lot less than those contained in a eukaryotic cell. Prokaryotic ribosomes are about 70s while eukaryotic ribosomes are larger, at 80s (Murray & Baron, 2007).
The differences between eukaryotic and prokaryotic continue as one goes more into detail with the specific structures. A eukaryotic cell has a cytoskeleton which is made up of microfilaments and microtubules, proteins that support the cell, transport essential proteins, and allow the cell to move; prokaryotic cells do not contain this feature at all (Murray & Baron, 2007). The mobility of a prokaryotic cell is possible because of their flagellum and not the tubulin that allows eukaryotic cells to move. Although eukaryotic cells also have flagella to ease movement, prokaryotic flagellum movement is rigid and rotates,...
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