What's the difference between prokaryotic cells and eukaryotic cells

Eukaryotic cells are what make up you (and also plants), whereas prokaryotic cells make up bacteria. If you think about the fact that bacteria are way smaller than plants and animals, you can remember that these cells are much smaller than eukaryotic cells. Prokaryotic literally means 'before the nucleus' so prokaryotes don't contain a nucleus, but they still have DNA, which is found in small rings floating around called 'plasmids'. Every prokaryotic cell has a cell wall surrounding it, whereas in the eukaryotic world only plant and fungal cells have cell walls, animal cells are only covered in a thinner layer known as the cell membrane. Finally, eukaryotic cells mostly divide by mitosis, but prokaryotes divide with binary fission.

MS
Answered by Matt S. Biology tutor

2766 Views

See similar Biology GCSE tutors

Related Biology GCSE answers

All answers ▸

What is the difference between phenotype and genotype?


What is a food chain we might see in the UK?


How do I answer long answer questions on (eg.) diffusion/active transport/osmosis


Describe how starch is digested mechanically and chemically from the time we eat it in our mouth until it reaches our small intestine where it's absorbed.


We're here to help

contact us iconContact ustelephone icon+44 (0) 203 773 6020
Facebook logoInstagram logoLinkedIn logo

MyTutor is part of the IXL family of brands:

© 2025 by IXL Learning