When a cell appears to have two nuclei, it means that it has undergone mitosis and is in the process of cytokinesis. Another possibility is that, it is a fungal cell that has become dikaryotic.
Several cell types in our own immune systems have such nuclei
Karyogamy is the fusion of the nuclei in the cell, while Plasmogamy is the fusion of cytoplasm in the cell, but not the nuclei.
The only time there can be 2 nuclei in a single cell is during mitosis, where one cell multiplies and becomes 2 cells.
An embryo, maybe
Nerve cell
It does not consist of nuclei
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A cow's red blood cell does not have a nuclei. Most mammals do not have a nuclei in their red blood cells.
a nuclei a cytoplasem and cell membrane
What about them? You didn't ask a real question, you know. Here are some links that might help
Several cell types in our own immune systems have such nuclei
cells come from other cells
It's the cell theory
All cells have nuclei
Mitosis.
Yes. A eukaryotic cell has a nucleus.
A eukaryotic cell does.