a nucleus is'nt a cell, it is the centre of cell
Yes. The vast majority do and pol nucleated cells (some species of microbe and some incorrectly formed cells).There are eukaryotic cells without a nucleus and others with more than one nucleus.
Prokaryotic cells have no nucleus. In the human body, mature erythrocytes (red blood cells) have no nucleus.
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
It appears in animal cells, plant cells and human cells.
Human Red Blood Cells have no nucleus
This theory is false. Red blood cells do not contain a nucleus.
The nucleus is the control center of the cell, and as all living things are made up of cells, all living things have AT LEAST on nucleus. Humans are made up of trillions of cells, therefore they have trillions of nuclei. However, one does not normally measure a species by nuclei. Animals with one nucleus would be so small, you need microscopes to see them, and strong ones at that.
One key genetic difference is the presence of a nucleus in human cells, which bacteria lack. Human cells have linear chromosomes enclosed within the nucleus, while bacteria have a single circular chromosome located in the cytoplasm. Additionally, bacteria may have plasmids, small circular DNA molecules that are often absent in human cells.
the nucleus sell
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.
No, they don't.
No, bacteria cells are prokaryotic cells, meaning they do not have a nucleus or membrane-bound organelles, while human skin cells are eukaryotic cells with a nucleus and organelles. Additionally, bacteria cells are much smaller in size compared to human skin cells.