Dikaryote. Some protists are thus and some fungi are this and more.
In the heterokaryotic stage, there are genetically distinct nuclei within the same hyphal cell, often seen in fungi during sexual reproduction. In the dikaryotic stage, there are two genetically distinct nuclei in the same hyphal cell, which is a more specialized form of the heterokaryotic stage and is common in basidiomycete fungi.
Cell division where the daughter cells have the same chromosome compliment as the parent cell is called mitosis.
the process of dividing one cell nucleus into two nuclei is called mitosis.
Two nuclei appear during the telophase stage of mitosis, which is the final stage of cell division. In telophase, the nuclear membrane reforms around the two sets of chromosomes, creating two distinct nuclei within the cell.
animal
fission
During the telophase stage of mitosis and meiosis two daughter nuclei are formed. The daughter nuclei begin forming the two ends of the cell.
Dikaryotization is a stage in the fungal life cycle where two genetically distinct nuclei exist within the same cell. This is commonly seen in basidiomycete fungi, where each nucleus comes from a different mating partner. The two nuclei remain separate and do not fuse until later stages of the life cycle.
Mitochondria and nuclei
cell plant grows between the two new nuclei
Both divide the replicated DNA into two separate nuclei, and they both undergo cytokinesis to divide the cell, though the process is different in both.
Plasmogamy is the fusion of cytoplasm from two haploid fungal cells, resulting in the formation of a dikaryotic cell with two separate haploid nuclei. Karyogamy is the fusion of the two haploid nuclei within the dikaryotic cell, leading to the formation of a diploid nucleus, which eventually undergoes meiosis to produce haploid spores.