They are made in interphase. They are made in G1 phase
Interphase
Do you mean as far as evolution goes? If so, the theory is that these organelles are formed from a symbiotic relationship with bacteria. This occurred billions of years ago.
Yes, organelles are replicated during interphase. Mitochondria divide in the phase called called G2 and other organelles grow and multiply during G1, i think!
Centrifuge
mitochondria, and chloroplasts.
Interphase
Do you mean as far as evolution goes? If so, the theory is that these organelles are formed from a symbiotic relationship with bacteria. This occurred billions of years ago.
Mitochondria are organelles and have no organelles of their own. They are inside a cell with other membrane bound organelles.
Yes, organelles are replicated during interphase. Mitochondria divide in the phase called called G2 and other organelles grow and multiply during G1, i think!
Because it is an organelle. Others are organelles too
The phases of Mitosis are Interphase, Prophase, Metaphase, Anaphase, Telophase (IPMAT). Cytokiensis is a separate thing altogether from Mitosis. So anything other than IPMAT is "not a phase in mitosis".
Interphase is different from the division stages of meiosis and mitosis in that no division occurs at interphase. Activities that occur include increase in the size of the cell and DNA synthesis.
yes
their own DNA
Centrifuge
DNA replication during interphase occurs in the nucleus. All other phases of mitosis occur in the cytoplasm after the nuclear membrane is disassembled.
There are two distinct organelles. They are mitochondria and chloroplast