yes
RBC (Red Blood Cell) was inside a blood vessel when he died in the anime "Cells at Work!".
The normal RBC count in urine is - 4 RBC/HPF RBC -red blood corpuscle HPF - high power field
Goblet and RBC are animal cells.Guard cells have chloroplasts.
That depends on the concentration of glucose inside of the red blood cell (RBC). If the glucose concentration inside the cells is less than the concentration outside the cell, then water will pass through the cell's membrane and into the surrounding fluid. If the concentration inside the RBC is greater than that of the outside solution, then the RBC will taken in water. Most likely, this will cause the cell to lyse open (burst) and die.
RBC (Red Blood Corpuscles) in Mammals except in Camel and lama.
Though RBC does not have organelles nor Nucleus it can live for about 120 with the help of the enzymes involved in glycolysis reaction , and remember the definition of cell , it is a living unit of life and rbc is living cell
No. An example would be the red blood cell (RBC). It has no nucleus, and therefore has no DNA.
If a cell is used to living in a hypotonic environment, that means that there exists less solute concentration outside of the cell. Take, for example, a red blood cell (RBC). When the RBC is placed in distilled water, the RBC is hypertonic to the water. The water is hypotonic to the RBC. In this case, the RBC will swell, and in most cases rupture. However, if one were to put an RBC in very salty water, the RBC would be hypotonic to the salt water. The salt water would be a hypertonic environment. In this case, the water would diffuse out of the RBC, causing it to shrivel. Awigman
RBC means red blood cell.
a rbc has no nucleus
red blood cell
RBC
red blood cell
RBC or Red Blood Cell, WBC or White Blood Cell.
Yes, a Red Blood Cell is a living thing, However it does not have a nucleus as it doesn't divide and can carry more oxygen without one. They are adapted to carry oxygen.
Red blood cell
RBC (Red Blood Cell) was inside a blood vessel when he died in the anime "Cells at Work!".