10 chromatids in the G2 phase
The five cell cycles are: Telophase (Cell wall pinches in, nuclear membranes are formed, two daughter cells are produced.) Interphase (You can cell the nucleolus, you can see uncoiled chromatin, you cannot see chromosomes.) Prophase (Chromatin uncoils, chromosomes appear, chromosomes duplicate to form sister chromatids, spindle forms between centrioles.) Metaphase (Chromosomes move to the middle of spindles.) Anaphase (Sister chromatids are pulled to opposite sides of cell, each chromatid is now a chromosome.)
Interphase is the longest phase of the cell cycle because it's the phase between divisions. It involves G1, S, G2, and G0 phase where the cell goes through growth after its division and then preperation to go through mitosis again.
Interphase is the first and longest stage of the cell cycle.MORE: Interphase is made up of three distince phases (G1, S and G2 phase).The problem is that the cell cycle phases are actually all rather fluid; they overlap and can vary in length. In addition in some cases the cell does not need to undergo the full G1 or G2 phases such as in the early replication of zygotes.The actual longest phase of the cell cycle is what is called "G0". This is the state the cell goes into where it is not preparing for the cell cycle. Most of your cells are in G0 right now.
No, interphase is part of the cell cycle and has nothing to do with mitosis, where the nucleus divides.
The five cell cycles are: Telophase (Cell wall pinches in, nuclear membranes are formed, two daughter cells are produced.) Interphase (You can cell the nucleolus, you can see uncoiled chromatin, you cannot see chromosomes.) Prophase (Chromatin uncoils, chromosomes appear, chromosomes duplicate to form sister chromatids, spindle forms between centrioles.) Metaphase (Chromosomes move to the middle of spindles.) Anaphase (Sister chromatids are pulled to opposite sides of cell, each chromatid is now a chromosome.)
The five cell cycles are: Telophase (Cell wall pinches in, nuclear membranes are formed, two daughter cells are produced.) Interphase (You can cell the nucleolus, you can see uncoiled chromatin, you cannot see chromosomes.) Prophase (Chromatin uncoils, chromosomes appear, chromosomes duplicate to form sister chromatids, spindle forms between centrioles.) Metaphase (Chromosomes move to the middle of spindles.) Anaphase (Sister chromatids are pulled to opposite sides of cell, each chromatid is now a chromosome.)
A cell spends most of its time in interphase, specifically in the G1 phase. This phase involves cell growth, metabolism, and preparation for DNA replication. Following G1 phase, the cell progresses through the S phase (DNA synthesis) and G2 phase (preparation for cell division) before entering mitosis.
There are actually 5 steps of mitosis - Steps 1: the nucleus disappears and chromosomes start to appear. 2: the chromosomes make copies of themselves. 3:the chromosomes line up in the middle of the cell. 4:the chromosomes split and are pulled to both ends of the cell. 5:the cell splits.
68 i think but don't trust me : )
Interphase is the longest phase of the cell cycle because it's the phase between divisions. It involves G1, S, G2, and G0 phase where the cell goes through growth after its division and then preperation to go through mitosis again.
Interphase is the first and longest stage of the cell cycle.MORE: Interphase is made up of three distince phases (G1, S and G2 phase).The problem is that the cell cycle phases are actually all rather fluid; they overlap and can vary in length. In addition in some cases the cell does not need to undergo the full G1 or G2 phases such as in the early replication of zygotes.The actual longest phase of the cell cycle is what is called "G0". This is the state the cell goes into where it is not preparing for the cell cycle. Most of your cells are in G0 right now.
DNA replication occurrs through a process called mitosis. The stages of mitosis are (I)PMAT.InterphaseIn the G1 phase, protein synthesis occurrs and mRNA runs along the chromosomes. In the S phase, DNA polymerase runs along the chromosomes/chromatids and creates complementary strands of DNA. In the G2 phase, the 23 chromosomes all have sister chromatids.2. Prophase- Chromosomes condense, spindle fibers form, and the nuclear membrane disintegrates. (23 chromosomes/46 chromatids)3. Metaphase- the chromosomes line up in the middle of the cell and spindle fibers from the centrioles connect to the chromosomes at the kinetochores. (23 chromosomes/46 chromatids)4. Anaphase- Sister chromatids are pulled apart by the spindle fibers to each pole of the cell. (23 chromosomes/46 chromatids)5. Telophase- nuclear envolopes form around the chromatids at each pole, the spindle fibers reduce, the chromatids decondense. (46 chromosomes/ 46 chromatids)Then cytokinesis occurrs to split up the cell into two cells.
One Cell has 10 chromosomes, it divides into 5 chromosomes. So at the end it has, 5 chromosomes. Your Welcome for the answer! ^_^
No, interphase is part of the cell cycle and has nothing to do with mitosis, where the nucleus divides.
Homologous chromosomes in pro-phase 1 arrange themselves as tetrads. A tetrad is a set of four copies of a chromosome--the two original pairs, and the two copies the cell has made.
The five cell cycles are: Telophase (Cell wall pinches in, nuclear membranes are formed, two daughter cells are produced.) Interphase (You can cell the nucleolus, you can see uncoiled chromatin, you cannot see chromosomes.) Prophase (Chromatin uncoils, chromosomes appear, chromosomes duplicate to form sister chromatids, spindle forms between centrioles.) Metaphase (Chromosomes move to the middle of spindles.) Anaphase (Sister chromatids are pulled to opposite sides of cell, each chromatid is now a chromosome.)
There are actually 5 steps of mitosis - Steps 1: the nucleus disappears and chromosomes start to appear. 2: the chromosomes make copies of themselves. 3:the chromosomes line up in the middle of the cell. 4:the chromosomes split and are pulled to both ends of the cell. 5:the cell splits.