chromatin
Yes, and when they condense they make chromosomes. On the chromosomes there are genes that make what you look like!
Chromatin is long, tangled strands of DNA found in the eukaryotic cells nucleus during interphase.
chromatin
chromatin
In eukaryotic organisms, genetic material in the form on DNA (which in turn are in the form of chromatin during interphase) is stored in the nucleus of the cell.
chromatin
It occurs in the nucleus of a cell
Interphase, which is further made up of G1 (G:Gap), S (S:Synthesis), G2, and sometimes G0 phases.
In plant or animal cells, during interphase, the nucleus is not undergoing division. The nucleus will be visible and the nuclear membrane will also be visible.
The nucleus is intact and the genetic material has the appearance of chromatin.
In eukaryotic organisms, genetic material in the form on DNA (which in turn are in the form of chromatin during interphase) is stored in the nucleus of the cell.
I hope by genetic code you mean DNA, and that's what I'm basing this question off of. Actually the DNA doesn't duplicate in mitosis; it duplicates in interphase, specifically synthase (S Phase).
Interphase == == == ==
chromatin
Synthesis occurs during Interphase. During Interphase, the genetic material is present as chromatin, a loosely bundled coil in the nucleus. The chromatin does not condense into chromosomes until Prophase. Thus, you would not see chromosomes during synthesis.
When the cell is splitting in two. Here is the order: the cell grows to twice its size, makes a copy of its genetic material, slices itself in the middle, and finally splits into two equal cells.
It occurs in the nucleus of a cell
Chromatin is located in the nucleus during Interphase.
Interphase, which is further made up of G1 (G:Gap), S (S:Synthesis), G2, and sometimes G0 phases.
In plant or animal cells, during interphase, the nucleus is not undergoing division. The nucleus will be visible and the nuclear membrane will also be visible.
nucleolus, RNA, DNA