<span> Cell Walls – Bacteria (prokaryotes of the domain Eubactera) have cell walls that contain the molecule peptidoglycan. No other type of organism has a cell wall containing this molecule. Prokaryotes in the domain Archea have cell walls, but they are made of materials other than peptidoglycan. Eukaytotic animal cells do not have cell walls. Eukaryotic plants and fungi have cells walls, made of cellulose and chitin, respectively. </span>
The polymer that provides plants with their genetic traits is nucleic
acid. Nucleic acids are what made the DNA (deoxyribonucleic
acid). The DNA are composed of a nitrogenous base, phosphate and a sugar
(deoxyribose). The bases are adenosine, tyrosine, uracil and guanine. And they
are needed to be matched to carry the trait.
The nitrogenous base are the traits that contains the genetic material
and are mostly composed of nucleic acids.
The genetic code is said to be redundant in that the same amino acid residue can be encoded by multiple, so-called synonymous, codons