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They are called daughter cells. meiosis makes 4 genetically different daughter cells.
Gametes!
No, yeast cells should be the same not genetically different. They use asexual reproduction. Yeast cells use budding, where a cell will grow a bud, a daughter cell and it splits in two. The bud or daughter cell splits off.
no, it produce 4 genetically different haploid cells
Because, like other cells that encounter the same process, that is their genetically determined mode-of-action.
Mutations result in formation of genetically different cells.
2 daughter cells with the same genotype. (However, mitotic crossing over is not unheard of, in which case the 2 cells will not be genetically identical. )
yes
This may not be the only way, but this could happen if the donor of the cells is a chimera.
They are called daughter cells. meiosis makes 4 genetically different daughter cells.
yes
what produces four genetically different haploid cells?
meiosis
Gametes!
No, yeast cells should be the same not genetically different. They use asexual reproduction. Yeast cells use budding, where a cell will grow a bud, a daughter cell and it splits in two. The bud or daughter cell splits off.
four genetically different cells
Yes