Contrast the major differences between the organization of DNADNA in viruses and bacteria versus eukaryotes. Drag the appropriate characteristics to their respective bins. ResetHelp contain a mixture of both unique and repetitive DNADNA sequencesconsist mostly of noncoding DNADNA sequencesconsist mostly of coding DNADNA sequencescontain large amounts of DNADNAshort, circular or linear DNADNA moleculescontain relatively little amount of DNADNA-associated proteinsconsist of mostly unique DNADNA sequencescontain a large amount of DNADNA-associated proteins Eukaryotic genomes Viral or bacterial genomes

Respuesta :

Answer:

Quantity, information content, packing and replication of chromosome.

Explanation:

Quantity, information content, packing and replication of chromosome are the major differences that is present between the organization of DNA in viruses and bacteria as compared to eukaryotes. The quantity of DNA in bacteria and virus is less than eukaryotes. In virus and bacteria, DNA is arranged into a single circular chromosome while on the other hand, in eukaryotes, DNA is arranged into several linear chromosomes.