The two identical strands of a chromosome are called chromatids. DNA replication occurs in the interphase stage of the cell cycle.
The region of a chromosome holding the two double strands of replicated DNA together is called a centromere. The complex of DNA and protein that makes up eukaryotic chromosome is properly called chromatin.
The two coiled up strands of DNA within a chromosome are called chromatids. During cell division, chromatids separate and are distributed to daughter cells.
The two strands of a double-stranded chromosome are called chromatids. Each chromatid contains a single DNA molecule that is duplicated and bound to its sister chromatid at the centromere.
When a chromosome has made a copy of itself, each of the two strands is called a sister chromatid. Sister chromatids are identical copies formed during DNA replication and are joined at the centromere.
It's called a Chromosome
The two identical strands of a chromosome are called chromatids. DNA replication occurs in the interphase stage of the cell cycle.
chromatid
Daughter Chromosomes
It is called a chromatid.Two chromatids are hold by centromere.
The leg of a chromosome refers to one of the two strands of a chromosome that are joined at the centromere. In a replicated chromosome, each leg is called a chromatid, with one leg being the sister chromatid of the other. During cell division, these chromatids are separated and distributed to daughter cells. The term "leg" is often used in a more informal context to describe the structure of the chromosome.
every and any DNA strand can constitue to a chromosome :)
One of the two strands of a chromosome that becomes visible during meiosis or mitosis is known as the chromatid. Each chromatid is an exact copy of the other, formed during DNA replication in the interphase preceding cell division.