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If mitosis goes wrong, cancerous cells forms.
Chemotherapy may or may not affect meiosis and mitosis. It is not a type of cell division.
- Metabolic factors like pH, Temperature, nutrients and metabolites - Growth factors like some hormones - Carcinogens (agents that cause cancer)
Nuclear fusion affects stellar evolution by essentially halting all mitosis and miosis that any cells in a stellar evolution could experience, and they stunt the growth of the object.
newly formed daughter cells split apart, cleavage furrow forms in animal cells, cell plates form in plant cells.
There would not be enough DNA to put in daughter cells, since DNA synthesis is the replication of DNA.
If mitosis goes wrong, cancerous cells forms.
Chemotherapy may or may not affect meiosis and mitosis. It is not a type of cell division.
The importance of the mitosis in your human body is that mitosis heals you when you break a bone, get a cut or get injured because it replaces the cells that were lost.
yes if your daughter has debts that she has listed to your address it can affect the whole households credit
I believe that they are called "daughter cells". If I am correct then the name "daughter"does not affect the gender of the said cell.
You should see your doctor about this complication as it can seriously affect her eyesight.
No. The only hereditary material is DNA. But histones are actually pretty interesting in their own right. They can affect what genes are available to be expressed by a cell. Some researchers think that modifications to histone proteins can be transmitted at mitosis from a mother cell to the daughter cells, thus maintaining a certain pattern of gene expression. This is part of a field called epigenetics.
- Metabolic factors like pH, Temperature, nutrients and metabolites - Growth factors like some hormones - Carcinogens (agents that cause cancer)
No, not if the wife is the sole borrower.
No, it will only affect ur joint account. Then cannot touch your other account.
It would have no affect as regards the primary amount paid by the obligor, but it would affect any extras, such as day care, so it could be presented as a rebuttable presumption. see links