it stays
During metaphase I of meiosis, tetrads line up along the equator of the cell. They are preparing for separation in the next phase.
Tetrads line up in the middle of the cell during metaphase I.
Tetrads don't form in mitosis. Tetrads form so that chromosomes can undergo crossing over which is a form of genetic recombination. The products of meiosis are gametes which ensure genetic diversity in subsequent generations. In mitosis, the daughter cells are genetically identical to the parent cell. No genetic recombination occurs in mitosis.
They are terms involving cell division.
1492
it stays
During metaphase I of meiosis, tetrads line up along the equator of the cell. They are preparing for separation in the next phase.
Tetrads line up in the middle of the cell during metaphase I.
a horse has 64 chromosomes That said, if you assume it DOES have 66, there would be 33 tetrads.
During meiosis, tetrads, which are connected by a synapse partway down their length, line up along the cellular equator during metaphase I. The tetrads are then separated during anaphase I as the spindle fibers pull the tetrads apart towards opposite sides of the cell.
Tetrads don't form in mitosis. Tetrads form so that chromosomes can undergo crossing over which is a form of genetic recombination. The products of meiosis are gametes which ensure genetic diversity in subsequent generations. In mitosis, the daughter cells are genetically identical to the parent cell. No genetic recombination occurs in mitosis.
They are terms involving cell division.
Homologous chromosomes in pro-phase 1 arrange themselves as tetrads. A tetrad is a set of four copies of a chromosome--the two original pairs, and the two copies the cell has made.
ApexThe tetrads are pulled apart.This is dusty clarks answer
No, a cell wall is found in a plant cell and it does not contain dexoxyribonucleic acid
Yes both cell contain cell membrane