A prokaryotic cell has no nucleus. Instead of being stored in the nucleus, the cell's DNA is found freely in its cytoplasm.
This is in contrast to eukaryotic cells, whose DNA is stored in the nucleus.
All complex organisms are eukaryotes. Prokaryotes include bacteria.
nope
Prokaryotes are organisms whose cells lack nuclei. An example of a prokaryote is bacteria.
A eukaryotic cell does.
plant cell
Eukaryotic cells are cells that contain nuclei and have complex structures. Prokaryotes are generally unicellular and lack nuclei.
Eukaryotic cells
Yes thy do. They just lack True Nuclei
No, nuclei in cells are not all the same size. Nuclei can vary in size depending on the type of cell and its function.
Not necessarily. Bacterial cells lack membrane bound nuclei but all eukaryotic cells have one.
No. Animals, plants and most living organisms do not lack a nuclei.
No, they are a type of fungi - which is a kingdom in it's own right, encompassing mould, yeast and fungi. Bacteria are prokaryotic - contain only one cell and lack nuclei. Fungi are eukaryotic (multi-celled), and much bigger.
A cell with several nuclei is known as a syncytium. This type of cell results from multiple nuclei residing in a single cytoplasmic mass without cell boundaries. Syncytia can be found in certain tissues like muscle and fungi.