Anaphase
Metaphase
Metaphase
Chromosomes align along equator, or metaphase pate of cell.
after metaphase the chromosomes rip or break in the middle after they have lined up in metaphase and start to drift to opposite sides of the nucleus
A metaphase cell is a stage in the cell cycle. It happens when a chromosome is most highly condensed and hence it is easiest to distinguish and to study the cell.
This happens during metaphase. I remember this phase because it is the move phaseof mitosis. The m from move matches the m from metaphase.In mitosis, it happens during metaphase.In meiosis, it happens twice and occurs in metaphase 1 and metaphase 2.
pairs of homologous chromosomes move to the equator of the cell
prophase, metaphase, anaphase, telophase (including cytokinesis)
Both cyclin A and Cdk remain undegraded
The law of independent assortment is most directly related to the metaphase I stage of meiosis. During metaphase I, homologous chromosomes line up randomly at the equatorial plate, independently of each other, before separating into different daughter cells. This random alignment contributes to the independent assortment of alleles from different genes located on non-homologous chromosomes.
Mitosis for sure has metaphase. Scientists are guessing that meiosis has it too, but they combine it and make it "prometaphase," because prophase and metaphase happens so fast in meiosis.
The phase that is directly affected is the metaphase of cell division. Mitotic spindle fibers play a crucial role in aligning chromosomes at the cell's equator during metaphase, and disrupting their development can lead to chromosome misalignment and cell division failure.