Cells can reproduce through mitosis and meiosis.
Eukaryotic cells (eukaryotes) use mitosis to reproduce asexually.
One-celled eukaryotes are single-celled organisms with all necessary organelles contained within one cell, while cells in many-celled eukaryotes are part of a larger organism, in which different cells perform specialized functions. Additionally, one-celled eukaryotes reproduce asexually by fission or budding, whereas many-celled eukaryotes reproduce sexually.
mitosis
Eukaryotes can reproduce through processes like mitosis and meiosis, where they create genetically identical or diverse offspring, respectively. They can also replicate their DNA during cell division to pass on genetic information to daughter cells.
Eukaryotes and prokaryotes are similar in that they are both types of cells that have a cell membrane, genetic material, and the ability to reproduce. They also both have ribosomes for protein synthesis.
mitosis
yes
Yes
There are two basic types of cells, prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Eukaryotes differ from prokaryotes in a few ways, but the biggest difference is that eukaryotes have a nucleus and prokaryotes don't.
Organelles
mitosis and miosis
Haploid eukaryotes have one set of chromosomes, while diploid eukaryotes have two sets. This means haploid cells have half the genetic material of diploid cells. Haploid eukaryotes are typically found in reproductive cells, like sperm and eggs, while diploid eukaryotes are found in most other cells of the body.