Yes, white blood cells do have nucleus. White blood cells are mainly of six types and each have a differently shaped nucleus.
Granulocytes:
Neutrophil - 3-4 lobed nucleus
Eosinophil - bilobed nucleus
basophil - partially constricted to 2 lobes
Lymphocyte - one large nucleus
Monocyte - one kidney shaped nucleus
Macrophage - one round nucleus
nuclei and nucleus are the same but the nucleus is a pural, and yes white blood cell does have a nuclei that contain at least different kinds of shapes of nucleus:
1> Neutrophil - 3-4 lobed nucleus
2> Eosinophil - bilobed nucleus
3> basophil - partially constricted to 2 lobes
4> Lymphocyte - one large nucleus
5> Monocyte - one kidney shaped nucleus
6> Macrophage - one round nucleus
Depends on the type of cell there are numerous blood cells. The red blood act as transport so no they don't. White blood cells are complex cells and have a nucleus. Those are the 2 I know off the top of my head but there many different types of blood cells.
no the cell droops where the nucleus would have been, and then there is more surface area
red blood cells do not have a nucleus because they lose it. Not having a nucleus leaves more room to carry oxygen. It also allows them to pass through the smallest of capillaries.
No, they don't.
The mature red blood cell does not have a nucleus. Some of the cells that turn into red blood cells do have a nucleus however.
The karyotype is the number and appearance of chromosomes in the nucleus of a cell. Mature red blood cells don't have a nucleus, so they cannot be used for karyotyping.
Prokaryotes are organisms whose cells lack a nucleus and other organelles.
Then, congratulations, you're living in the real world, where human red blood cells do not, in fact, have nuclei (the red blood cells of some species do have nuclei, but those of humans do not). You've essentially asked "What if the sky were blue?"
Red blood cells (erythrocyte) do not contain nuclei. In case you're wondering where the DNA they get from a blood sample comes from, it is taken from the white blood cells (leukocytes) which do contain nuclei.
Mature red blood cells are the only human cells that do not have a nucleus. sorry to do this but that's not the answer but i don't know it
Prokaryotic cells have no nucleus. In the human body, mature erythrocytes (red blood cells) have no nucleus.
There are several different cells in the human body that do not have a nucleus. An example of this is a red blood cell, or erythrocyte.
Human Red Blood Cells have no nucleus
Frog red blood cells contain a nucleus, whereas human red blood cells do not.
This theory is false. Red blood cells do not contain a nucleus.
Nucleus
The mature red blood cell does not have a nucleus. Some of the cells that turn into red blood cells do have a nucleus however.
It depends on what kind of animal it is. If it is an amphibian, the red blood cells will have a nucleus. Human red blood cells do not have nuclei.
they are the only cells in the human body that do not have a nucleus.
Mature human red blood cells have no nucleus.
1) Frog's red blood cells contain a nucleus that carries all the genetic information needed to make new cells by replication. Human red blood cells contain no nuclei because they reproduce differently than frog. 2) We human have platelets in our blood but frogs do not have them.