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Prokaryotic cells do NOT have a nucleus.
Prokaryote means that it contains no true nucleus, which is a nucleus bound with nuclear envelope. Animal cells and plant cells do have a nucleus which is bound with nuclear envelope. For this reason, they are called eukaryote, meaning true nucleus.
No. Red blood cells (RBC) for example, do not contain a nucleus. Also, prokaryotes do not.
A cell with a true nucleus is called a eukaryotic cell. See: http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/E/eukarycell.htmlThat would be a eukaryotic cell or a eukaryote. This means the cell has a really or true nucleus. The opposite of this is prokaryote, this means before nucleus. Prokaryotes have strands of DNA.
A cell.
Prokaryotic cells do NOT have a nucleus.
EUKARYOTES are the cells w/ true nucleus.
Cells in the kingdom plantae do have a nucleus. This is true for all Eukaryotic cells. Plant cells have an enclosed nucleus.
Eukaryotic cells have a nucleus and prokaryotic cells have no true nucleus.
Prokaryotic cells do NOT have a nucleus.
Prokaryotic Cells
Cells in the kingdom plantae do have a nucleus. This is true for all Eukaryotic cells. Plant cells have an enclosed nucleus.
No, eukaryotic cells imply that the cells have a "true nucleus" bacterial cells (prokaryotic) dont have a true nucleus and contain their DNA in supercoils inside the cytoplasm
The first true cells were prokaryotic cells. These were simple life-forms that didn't have a nucleus. The next to evolve were eukaryotic cells which do have a nucleus.
Bacterial cells do have a nucleus. Basically all cells have a nucleus! Bacteria cells are just a different shape like plant cells. If cells didn't have a nucleus they wouldn't be able to work properly!
Prokaryotic cells are primitive nucleus like structures and eukaryotic cells have well defined nucleus
Eukaryote(s)