Yes. All types cells in your body have got nucleus. There is only one exception. That is red blood cells. They do not have nucleus. But there are about hundred trillion cells in your body. Number of red blood cells is about the quarter of the total number of cells.
As above incorrect answer, virtually all cells, as all matter (except that stuff they couldn't name because they don't know what it is, despite it being about 95% of everything out there.. maybe in your body too?) but ya, except for stray hydrogen, and all that quantum foam (where two particles are created from *nothing* one matter, the other anti-matter, and they instantly collide creating the most extreme way we know to make energy.. collide a matter and an anti-matter particle, direct matter to energy transformation. This is the energy you needed a moment ago to create the particles in the first place. Essentially effect and then cause.
But basically all the atoms have them except hydrogen.. just gloss over the rest of the details like the 95%+ of the rest of the universe that nobody has the slightest idea what it is (except it give off gravity?) Maybe they should have called it MUBATEG. Matter Undetectable By Any Technology Except Gravity-detectors...? Details, details.. ;) You'd think people want to know how thing work or something...
Yes all matter contains protons and all mater except for hydrogen contains neutrons.
Humans are eukaryotic organisms, so yes we have a nucleus in our cells.
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.
Prokaryote : bacteria, also red blood cells (not true cells but dieing remnants).
No. Not all cells have a nucleus, which contains nuclear DNA; but all cells have mitochondria, which have their own DNA, called mitochondrial DNA, or mDNA. In humans, the cells that lack a nucleus and therefore nuclear DNA, are mature red blood cells, but they do have mitochondria and mitochondrial DNA.
human bones are eukaryotic cells as they contain well developed nucles.
Then, congratulations, you're living in the real world, where human red blood cells do not, in fact, have nuclei (the red blood cells of some species do have nuclei, but those of humans do not). You've essentially asked "What if the sky were blue?"
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.
"Sickle cells" refers to an abnormal shape (rather like a sickle) of red blood cells. Red blood cells in humans do not have a nucleus.
Prokaryote : bacteria, also red blood cells (not true cells but dieing remnants).
Within humans, red blood cells and blood platelets do not have nuclei.
No. Not all cells have a nucleus, which contains nuclear DNA; but all cells have mitochondria, which have their own DNA, called mitochondrial DNA, or mDNA. In humans, the cells that lack a nucleus and therefore nuclear DNA, are mature red blood cells, but they do have mitochondria and mitochondrial DNA.
A cells nucleus, mitochondria or a chloroplast may contain the DNA.
Protists are Eukaryotic cells, so they will have a nucleus (and a nucleolus), like humans.
what organelle funtions to isolate a humans cells chromosmes from the cytoplasm
Yes, it is. Animal cells have a defined nucleus therefore; it is a eukaryotic cell. Eukaryotic cells have a nucleus (i.e. humans). Prokaryotic cells do not have a nucleus (i.e. bacteria, etc.) yup they're kinda the same just do things
Nucleus
eukaryote cell is the relative of a prokaryote cell it is a friend of plant and animal cells humans have eukaryotic cells
Many cells do not contain a nucleus. Most multicellular organisms have at least one type of cell without a nucleus, in humans, for example, our red blood cells lack a nucleus.