multinuclei
Multinuclei refers to cells that contain more than one nucleus. In biology, multinucleation can result from cell fusion, in which two or more cells merge to form a larger cell, or from nuclear division that is not followed by cytokinesis, known as endomitosis or endoreplication. In some tissues the nuclei remain temporally or spatially distinct; in others they form a stable syncytial cell.
Skeletal muscle fibers, where many myoblasts fuse during development to create long multinucleated fibers. Each nucleus
Osteoclasts, bone-resorbing cells, formed by fusion of mononuclear precursors; their multiple nuclei coordinate bone degradation.
Placental syncytiotrophoblasts, formed by fusion of cytotrophoblasts, create a multinucleated layer essential for nutrient exchange between
Other examples include coenocytic hyphae in some fungi and algae, and megakaryocytes in bone marrow, which
Functional implications and variation:
Multinucleation can enable regional control of gene expression across a large cytoplasm, increase protein synthesis capacity,
See also: multinucleated cells, syncytium, endomitosis, polyploidy.