Those are called red blood cells.
On the contrary, organelles are present in the blood. Blood cells are cells. All cells have organelles as they are what allow the cell to carry out its every functions.
Red blood cells are considered cells, but they lack all organelles. Red blood cells cannot divide or replicate like other cells of the body.
A and B antigens are present on the red blood cells of Mr. Greens Blood.
Mammalian red blood cells do not contain a nucleus.
While they are they are found in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes, and present in found within all living cells that synthesize proteins, a few cells (such as human red blood cells) do not contain them.
Not quite. Different blood types result from different antigens present on the membranes of red blood cells.
Hemoglobin is present in red blood cells.
Vessicles are rather primitive and present all-throughout.
red blood cells hemoglogbin
No, when red blood cells are mature, they do not have a nucleus.
All your genes are present in your liver cells
In whole blood transfusions... yes, but only a small amount. Red blood cells have no nuclei and therefore only mitochondrial DNA; white cells have nuclei but are present in much smaller numbers.