Bacteria.
Some unicellular organisms get by fine with no nucleus. The general term for these is prokaryotes. (A few prokaryotes form multicelluar stages, but this is not common.) Most multicellular organisms... and some unicellular organisms... do have cell nuclei. The general term for these is eukaryotes. Some specialized cells in multicellular organisms have no nucleus. For example, mammalian red blood cells have no nucleus. The generic term for any cell without a nucleus, whether a prokaryote or a specialized cell in a eukaryote, is anucleate (which simply means "without a nucleus").
The term is confusingly used for both atoms and cells, and are only alike in their locations.In atomic structure, the word was applied in the modern sense in 1912 by Ernest Rutherford, from his experiment that showed a very small solid mass within each atom. The word was used as early as 1844 by Michael Faraday to mean the center of an atom. The word nucleus means 'kernel' which was another term used to describe the central mass, and which was still used for several years after Rutherford's experiments.In cytology, the term 'lumen' for a cell nucleus was used by Antonie van Leeuwenhoek around 1676. In 1831, Scottish botanist Robert Brown used the terms 'aerola' and 'nucleus' to describe the darker spots he saw within orchid cells.
The term is confusingly used for both atoms and cells, and are only alike in their locations.In atomic structure, the word was applied in the modern sense in 1912 by Ernest Rutherford, from his experiment that showed a very small solid mass within each atom. The word was used as early as 1844 by Michael Faraday to mean the center of an atom. The word nucleus means 'kernel' which was another term used to describe the central mass, and which was still used for several years after Rutherford's experiments.In cytology, the term 'lumen' for a cell nucleus was used by Antonie van Leeuwenhoek around 1676. In 1831, Scottish botanist Robert Brown used the terms 'aerola' and 'nucleus' to describe the darker spots he saw within orchid cells.
Eukaryote cells CAN survive without a nucleus, but only for short amounts of time, like cloning for example. They could not survive long term without a nucleus. So if you are talking short term: yes If you are talking long term: no (:
An anucleate cell is the term given to a cell devoid of nucleus.
Eukaryotic.
Gene
Some unicellular organisms get by fine with no nucleus. The general term for these is prokaryotes. (A few prokaryotes form multicelluar stages, but this is not common.) Most multicellular organisms... and some unicellular organisms... do have cell nuclei. The general term for these is eukaryotes. Some specialized cells in multicellular organisms have no nucleus. For example, mammalian red blood cells have no nucleus. The generic term for any cell without a nucleus, whether a prokaryote or a specialized cell in a eukaryote, is anucleate (which simply means "without a nucleus").
Nucleus
The term is confusingly used for both atoms and cells, and are only alike in their locations.In atomic structure, the word was applied in the modern sense in 1912 by Ernest Rutherford, from his experiment that showed a very small solid mass within each atom. The word was used as early as 1844 by Michael Faraday to mean the center of an atom. The word nucleus means 'kernel' which was another term used to describe the central mass, and which was still used for several years after Rutherford's experiments.In cytology, the term 'lumen' for a cell nucleus was used by Antonie van Leeuwenhoek around 1676. In 1831, Scottish botanist Robert Brown used the terms 'aerola' and 'nucleus' to describe the darker spots he saw within orchid cells.
The term is confusingly used for both atoms and cells, and are only alike in their locations.In atomic structure, the word was applied in the modern sense in 1912 by Ernest Rutherford, from his experiment that showed a very small solid mass within each atom. The word was used as early as 1844 by Michael Faraday to mean the center of an atom. The word nucleus means 'kernel' which was another term used to describe the central mass, and which was still used for several years after Rutherford's experiments.In cytology, the term 'lumen' for a cell nucleus was used by Antonie van Leeuwenhoek around 1676. In 1831, Scottish botanist Robert Brown used the terms 'aerola' and 'nucleus' to describe the darker spots he saw within orchid cells.
Eukaryote cells CAN survive without a nucleus, but only for short amounts of time, like cloning for example. They could not survive long term without a nucleus. So if you are talking short term: yes If you are talking long term: no (:
An anucleate cell is the term given to a cell devoid of nucleus.
The cells of eukaryotes will contain a nucleus.
Eukaryotic is a Greek word for "true nucleus". So karyotic will be nucleus. There is another word term Prokaryotic which in Greek as "before the nucleus". Hope I answer your question
prokaryotic
no nucleus is INSIDE cells