Yes
Cell division occurs in both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells. In prokaryotic cells, cell division is mainly achieved through binary fission, while in eukaryotic cells, it occurs through either mitosis or meiosis.
False
Mitosis is division of the nucleus, and prokaryotes don't have a nucleus
Mitosis is division of the nucleus, and prokaryotes don't have a nucleus
Prokaryotic cells
No, prokaryotic cells divide through a process called binary fission, which involves the replication and division of the genetic material and other cellular components into two identical daughter cells. Mitosis is a process specific to eukaryotic cells.
A prokaryotic cell does not perform mitosis. Prokaryotic cells, such as bacteria, reproduce through a process called binary fission, not mitosis, which is a form of cell division specific to eukaryotic cells.
Mitotic division is the includes division of nucleus and it divides the cell into two daughter cell whereas the prokaryotic cell don't have nucleus and they are divided through the process of binary fission
Prokaryotic cells do not undergo mitosis because they lack a true nucleus and membrane-bound organelles. Instead, they replicate through a process called binary fission, where the DNA is duplicated and the cell divides into two daughter cells.
No, bacteria do not perform mitosis. They reproduce through a process called binary fission, where a single cell divides into two identical daughter cells. Mitosis is a type of cell division that occurs in eukaryotic cells, not in prokaryotic cells like bacteria.
Prokaryotic cells reproduce and divide using binary fission, mitosis, and meiosis. It just depends on the species of cell.
prokaryotes go through binary fission (budding), while eukaryotes go through mitosis