The cell cycle comprises of several phases: G0, G1, S, G2, and M. At all phases, there are checkpoints to regulate cell proliferation. G0 is the resting phase. G1 and G2 are gap phases before mitosis. In G1, amino-acids and enzymes required for DNA replication are mobilized. At the G2 checkpoint, the cellâ??s readiness for mitosis is confirmed.
G2 because cell division happens during the M phase. the order is G1, S, G2, M phase.
G1: Cell growth S: DNA replication G2: Preparation for mitosis M: Mitosis and cytokinesis
Put the following stages of the cell cycle in order: G2, S, G1, M.
Before M Phase
There are G0 (when the cell is not growing, so maybe don't include it) Interphase, subdivided into G1, S and G2 phases. G1 (the cell is getting ready for S phase) S (stuff is synthesised) G2 (the cell is getting ready for M phase) M (mitosis, subdivided into 4 phases) Prophase Metaphase Anaphase Telophase These are followed by cytokinesis; the actual division of the cell.
G1 to S to G2 to M to C
In S, G2, early M, and late M
Yes. The s phase stands for the synthesis of DNA, in which DNA is replicated. Refer to the link for an illustration of the cell cycle. http://www.zo.utexas.edu/faculty/sjasper/images/12.4.gif
M to G1 and G2 to M - That answer is incorrect. The correct answer is G1 to S stage and G2 to M stage. I am 100% sure. The checkpoints are after G1, during S, and after G2. The cell cycle goes G1 (gap 1 stage of interphase) to S (synthesis stage of interphase) to G2 (gap 2 stage of interphase) to M (mitosis) to C (cytokinesis).
G2
G1 phase then S phase then G2 phase then comes meitosis (interphase, prophase, metaphase, anaphase, telophase) then cytokinesis