Mature red blood cells do not have nuclei.
Mammalian red blood cells do not contain a nucleus.
That depends on which species you're referring to. In most mammals, including humans, mature red blood cells do not have a nucleus.
Mammalian erythrocytes seem to do quite well without a nucleus.
A red blood cell, for one.
Although the nucleus may not be present at the center of the cell in many cases, it is true for most mammalian and microbial species. In a plant cell however, there is a large vacuole in the center of the cell, causing the nucleus to be present off to one side.
Most do, some don't. A mammalian red blood cell lacks a nucleus.
Yes, animal cells have a nucleus (except for mammalian red blood cells).
Mammalian red blood cells do not contain a nucleus.
That depends on which species you're referring to. In most mammals, including humans, mature red blood cells do not have a nucleus.
Mammalian erythrocytes laks a nucleus.Almost every other cell have a nucleus.
Mammalian erythrocytes seem to do quite well without a nucleus.
A red blood cell, for one.
Although the nucleus may not be present at the center of the cell in many cases, it is true for most mammalian and microbial species. In a plant cell however, there is a large vacuole in the center of the cell, causing the nucleus to be present off to one side.
Cytoplasm nucleus cell membrane
Nucleus is an imp component of cell essential for survival . An organised nucleus appears in eukaryotes(except mammalian rbc and sieve tube cells of phloem) for the first time .Prokaryotes have an unorganised nucleus....
Yes, it is possible for a Eukaryotic cell to have no nucleus. An example of a cell without a nucleus is the mammalian red blood cell. However, Eukaryotic cells without a nucleus, like red blood cells, are unable to replicate. This is why red blood cells need to be continuously produced in the bone marrow.
Mammalian cells have nuclei. But red blood cells lack