the chromosomes will move in the equatorial plane
sister chromatids lining up in the center of the cell
Sister chromatids lining up in the center of the cell
during metaphase 0_______0
There is no stage between metaphase and anaphase. Mitosis has four stages, first its prophase then metaphase then anaphase then telophase.
The chromosomes attach to a spindle fiber across the equator of the cell.
During the metaphase I meiosis are the bivalents are arranged along the equator. During the prophase I of meiosis I the crossing over occurs.
Metaphase 1 looks like a group of bivalents. This is because the spindle fibers get aligned and arranged via a bipolar attraction. They end up along the equatorial line.
Metaphase!
This is the metaphase.
In the Prophase. Nuclear envelope and nucleolus disappears.
Metaphase is the third phase of mitosis, when the chromosomes line up at the equator of the cell.
During metaphase.A trick is to remember: "M for metaphase, M for the middle of the cell". This is to remind you that at metaphase the centromeres of the chromosomes are aligned in the plane of the equator.
Metaphase 1 The chromosomes line up on the equatorial (metaphase) plate. Metaphase 2 Kinetochores of the paired chromatids.
Paired homologous chromosomes are found at the spindle equator during metaphase. During metaphase the chromosomes line up on the plate and attach to the fully formed spindle.
pair of tetrads facing opposite poles
It is during the anaphase of meiosis that the replicated homologous chromosomes line up next to each other at the cell's equator.
Mitosis is the process of cell division which involves 5 different phases. These phases include prophase, prometaphase, metaphase, anaphase and telophase. Metaphase is the phase in which the chromosomes line up in the middle of the cell.
Metaphase is one of the phases in the cellcycle
Metaphase 1