During anaphase I of meiosis the spindle fibers pull apart in homologous chromosomes. The spindle fibers are composed of micro-tubules. The spindle fibers continue to shorten during anaphase in order to bring the chromosomes at two poles.
During anaphase I of meiosis the spindle fibers pull apart in homologous chromosomes. The spindle fibers are composed of micro-tubules. The spindle fibers continue to shorten during anaphase in order to bring the chromosomes at two poles.
During anaphase I of meiosis the spindle fibers pull apart in homologous chromosomes. The spindle fibers are composed of micro-tubules. The spindle fibers continue to shorten during anaphase in order to bring the chromosomes at two poles.
Spindle fibers are a system of microtubules that pull chromosomes apart during cell division. This must occur for the cell to divide.
The homologous chromosomes separate during anaphase I of meiosis.
The spindle fibers shorten, pulling the Centromeres apart, and separating the sister Chromatin's, pulling them to either end of the cell.
During prophase, the spindle fibers attach to the homologous chromosome pairs at the centromere.
anaphase one
Anaphase
They pull the sister chromatids apart.
They pull the sister chromatids apart.
The spindle fibers. The spindle fibers that attach to the sister chromatids are called called chromosomal microtubles.
Spindle fibers are necessary in mitosis as they help in bringing half the number of chromosomes on each side of the cell, so that when the cell divides, the chromosomes are distributed equally in both the daughter nuclei.
Anaphase is the stage of mitosis when chromosomes split apart.
They pull the sister chromatids apart.
They pull the sister chromatids apart.
They pull the sister chromatids apart.
The spindle fibers. The spindle fibers that attach to the sister chromatids are called called chromosomal microtubles.
Yes. They are used to separate the sister chromatids apart.
Spindle fibers attach to the centromeres on the sister chromatids.
Spindle fibers are necessary in mitosis as they help in bringing half the number of chromosomes on each side of the cell, so that when the cell divides, the chromosomes are distributed equally in both the daughter nuclei.
spindle fibers
i think it is the sister chromatids
Microtubules pull the chromatids from the chromosome apart. Each former sister c
spindle "a" They are called spindle fibers and are made up of microtubules. These fibers are released from the centrioles to pull apart sister chromatids during mitosis and meosisII or pull apart homologous chromosomes during meosis I.
During Mitosis, the spindle pulls apart the sister chromatids of the chromosome in the Anaphase stage.