Protists Diplomonads, like
Giardia, have two nuclei.
Ciliates have cells that contain two nuclei: a
macronucleus and a
micronucleus. The
schizont of
apicomplexan
parasites is a form of a coenocyte (i.e. a plasmodium in the general sense) as well as the plasmodia of
microsporidian (
Fungi) and
myxosporidian (
Metazoa) parasites. The
trophont of
syndinean (Dinoflagellata) parasites.
Xenophyophorea are giant cells with numerous nuclei, and is common on the
abyssal plains.
Algae Coenocytic cells are present in diverse and unrelated groups of algae, including
Xanthophyceae (e.g.,
Vaucheria),
red algae (e.g.,
Griffithsia) and
green algae (e.g., the internodal cells of
Chara). In the siphonous
green algae
Bryopsidales and some
Dasycladales, the entire thallus is a single multinucleate cell, which can be many meters across (e.g.
Caulerpa). However, in some cases, crosswalls may occur during reproduction. The green algal order
Cladophorales is characterized by siphonocladous organization, i.e., the
thalli are composed of many coenocytic cells. In contrast to the Cladophorales where nuclei are organized in regularly spaced cytoplasmic domains, the cytoplasm of
Bryopsidales exhibits streaming, enabling transportation of organelles, transcripts and nutrients across the plant.
Myxogastrids (slime molds) :
See Plasmodium (life cycle). Plants The
endosperm in
plants begins to grow when one fertilized cell (the
primary endosperm cell) becomes a coenocyte. Different species produce coenocytes with different numbers of nuclei before the PEC eventually begins to subdivide, with some growing to contain thousands of nuclei.
Fungi Some
filamentous fungi (such as Glomeromycota, Chytridiomycota and Neocalligomastigomycota) may contain multiple nuclei in a coenocytic
mycelium. A coenocyte functions as a single coordinated unit composed of multiple cells linked structurally and functionally, i.e. through gap junctions. Fungal mycelia in which
hyphae lack
septa are known as "aseptate" or "coenocytic".
Metazoans: invertebrates Many insects, such as the model organism
Drosophila melanogaster, lay eggs that initially develop as "syncytial" blastoderms, i.e. early on the
embryos exhibit incomplete
cell division. The nuclei undergo
S-phase (DNA replication) and sister chromatids get pulled apart and re-assembled into nuclei containing full sets of homologous chromosomes, but
cytokinesis does not occur. Thus, the nuclei multiply in a common cytoplasmic space. The early embryo "syncytium" of invertebrates such as
Drosophila is important for "syncytial" specification of cell differentiation. The egg cell cytoplasm contains localized
mRNA molecules such as those that encode the
transcription factors Bicoid and Nanos. Bicoid protein is expressed in a gradient that extends from the anterior end of the early embryo, whereas Nanos protein is concentrated at the posterior end. At first, the nuclei of the early embryo rapidly and synchronously divide in the "syncytial" blastoderm and then migrate through the cytoplasm and position themselves in a monolayer around the periphery, leaving only a small number of nuclei in the center of the egg, which will become yolk nuclei. The position of the nuclei along the embryonic axes determines the relative exposure of different amounts of Bicoid, Nanos, and other
morphogens. Those nuclei with more Bicoid will activate genes that promote differentiation of cells into head and thorax structures. Nuclei exposed to more Nanos will activate genes responsible for differentiation of posterior regions, such as the abdomen and
germ cells. The same principles hold true for the specification of the dorso-ventral axis – higher concentration of nuclear Dorsal protein on the ventral side of the egg specify the ventral fate, whereas absence thereof allows dorsal fates. After the nuclei are positioned in a monolayer underneath the egg membrane, the membrane begins to slowly invaginate, thus separating the nuclei into cellular compartments; during this period, the egg is called a cellular blastoderm. The
pole cells – the germline
anlage – are the first cells to separate fully. ==Pathological examples==