Your question really doesn't make any sense. Osseous tissue is bone tissue. Because bone is part of a vertebrate, it contains eukaryotic cells. All of your tissues (or that of any eukaryote) will contain eukaryotic cells. Prokaryotes are all unicellular and so do not form tissues at all.
The term tissue gives you the answer straight away. There is no such thing as prokaryotic tissue. Tissues only exist in true multicellular organisms, by definition. No multicellular tissue-producing prokaryotes exist (see myxobacteria for an interesting aside). Another tip-off is the term "osseous" which refers to bone. Again, not something prokaryotes are doing.
Prokaryotes are comprised of the domains Bacteria and Archaea.
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Your question really doesn't make any sense. Osseous tissue is bone tissue. Because bone is part of a vertebrate, it contains eukaryotic cells. All of your tissues (or that of any eukaryote) will contain eukaryotic cells. Prokaryotes are all unicellular and so do not form tissues at all.
The term tissue gives you the answer straight away. There is no such thing as prokaryotic tissue. Tissues only exist in true multicellular organisms, by definition. No multicellular tissue-producing prokaryotes exist (see myxobacteria for an interesting aside). Another tip-off is the term "osseous" which refers to bone. Again, not something prokaryotes are doing.
Prokaryotes are comprised of the domains Bacteria and Archaea.