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Only eukaryote contains histone right?
That is not correct. Archaea (methanogens and extremeophiles) have DNA with histones.
Bacteria are the prokaryotes without histone.
this is correct...
however, we dont really need to know the details people just stick to the big picture. they wont ask you a question saying: does archaea have histones? or which prokaryotes have histones?
this is correct...
however, we dont really need to know the details people just stick to the big picture. they wont ask you a question saying: does archaea have histones? or which prokaryotes have histones?
They can add this detail one as answer choice to confuse students!😀
Ok, so archea with histone bacteria with histone got it.
dude i write the DAT.. trust me kids. it wont be on there...
its my part time job till i become a dentist and stuff, you know???
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I hope you meant bacteria withOUT histone lol
dude i write the DAT.. trust me kids. it wont be on there...
its my part time job till i become a dentist and stuff, you know???
![]()
From what I here aren't there a couple of finely detailed questions on every test. For example someone had a question asking what would happen if you insert a 2nd notochord into a growing frog embryo.
People say just stick to the basics, others say its no joke when people say the DAT is super detailed
I agree. The differences between archae and bacteria are important to know.you definitely need to understand difference between archae & prokarya. This is not a detailed question....
you definitely need to understand difference between archae & prokarya. This is not a detailed question....
I agree that we should know the difference between archae and bacteria, but the only sources I am finding on the internet that discuss archae histones are scientific journals.
Just my personal opinion, but I don't think they expect us to know things in the scientific literature that are rarely mentioned in undergraduate classes or textbooks. In fact, I'd bet that a lot of the general rules we learn in undergrad would actually have to be modified if we read through the literature on it.
lol you dont have to read literatures. histones, peptidoglycan, cell wall etc all these are discussed in every bio textbook. Its in cliffs & schaums as well.I agree that we should know the difference between archae and bacteria, but the only sources I am finding on the internet that discuss archae histones are scientific journals.
Just my personal opinion, but I don't think they expect us to know things in the scientific literature that are rarely mentioned in undergraduate classes or textbooks. In fact, I'd bet that a lot of the general rules we learn in undergrad would actually have to be modified if we read through the literature on it.