Answer:
D) eukaryotic genes are arranged individually, while prokaryotic genes are grouped into operons.
Step-by-step explanation:
A gene is a specif fragment of DNA that contains the information required for cells in order to survive and reproduce. A gene is used as a template to synthesize an RNA molecule, typically a messenger RNA (mRNA) molecule which is then translated into protein. Structurally, the genes are composed of regulatory regions (e.g., promoter sequences) and coding regions. In eukaryotic cells, genes have a specific structure associated with post-transcriptional modifications of the primary mRNA transcripts (pre-mRNAs), which are processed to yield mature RNAs such as mature mRNAs. Eukaryotic genes are structurally arranged in individual segments of information that first encode specific pre-mRNAs. These eukaryotic pre-mRNAs contain coding regions (exons), which are retained in the final mature mRNA, and non-coding regions (introns), which are removed through RNA processing (alternative splicing). On the other hand, prokaryotic genes are clustered in polycistronic transcription units called operons. A procaryotic operon is a functional unit of DNA consisting of a cluster of genes that share a promoter and terminator sequence. These genes are transcribed together into one long mRNA, and this initial transcript is either 1-translated together in the cytoplasm or 2-processed to create monocistronic mRNAs that are translated individually.