Not necesserily. The sex chromosome can also come from the father's side.
Of course they do. Mitosis is asexual cell division in which the daughter cells are identical to mother cell in all aspects including DNA.
Mitosis
Daughter cells are a part of mitosis (asexual cell division). They are formed in Telophase when the cell plate forms and creates two separate cells called daughter cells. In mitosis, each daughter cell is identical to the "mother cell" (original cell).
Mother and daughter cells are related through the process of cell division. The mother cell divides to produce the daughter cells, which are genetically identical to each other and to the mother cell. They can be compared in terms of their genetic information and functional capabilities.
During mitosis, daughter cells have the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell. Mitosis is responsible for producing genetically identical daughter cells for growth and repair in multicellular organisms.
Mitosis produces two identical daughter cells from a single original cell.
The daughter cells are genetically identical to each other and to the original mother cell. They are formed through the process of cell division where the mother cell splits into two identical daughter cells. Each daughter cell retains the same genetic material as the original mother cell.
Yes, mother and daughter cells are genetically identical following mitosis, as the process involves the replication of the cell's DNA, ensuring that each daughter cell receives an exact copy of the genetic material. However, in meiosis, which produces gametes, the daughter cells are genetically diverse due to processes like crossing over and independent assortment. Thus, while mitotic daughter cells are identical, meiotic daughter cells are not.
osmosis
The genetic information in parent cells is copied exactly and passed to daughter cells.
The process you are referring to is called mitosis. During mitosis, the mother cell's chromosomes are duplicated and then divided into two identical sets. The cell then divides into two daughter cells, each containing the same number of chromosomes as the mother cell.
mitosis ends with 2 identical daughter cells and meiosis ends with 4 non-identical sister chromatids.