DNA replication occurs during this S (synthesis) phase. Gap 2 (G2): During the gap between DNA synthesis and mitosis, the cell will continue to grow and produce new proteins.
During the G1 phase, a cell grows and functions normally. Protein synthesis occurs, more organelles are produced and the cytoplasm increases in size.
The Gap O in the cell cycle is the dormant stage. Some cells in this Gap O stage can come out of dormancy if they are damaged. Some cannot be repaired or replaced like the nerve cells.
it must pass a critical checkpoint.
Gap 1 Phase
he mitotic cell cycle is as follows:Gap 1SynthesisGap 2MitosisCytokinesisMitosis is the process by which the original cell (parent cell) divides to create an exact copy of the original cell (daughter cell). The mitotic cell cycle is composed of 5 stages that allow the cell to produce a "clone" of the original cell. The cell cycle proceeds as follows: Gap 1, Synthesis, Gap 2, Mitosis, and Cytokinesis. The first grouping of stages known as interphase, contains the first 3 of the 5 cell cycle stages.
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).
The Gap O in the cell cycle is the dormant stage. Some cells in this Gap O stage can come out of dormancy if they are damaged. Some cannot be repaired or replaced like the nerve cells.
G1 or gap 1
it must pass a critical checkpoint.
Gap 1 Phase
Gap 1, Synthesis, Gap 2, Mitosis , Cytokinesis
he mitotic cell cycle is as follows:Gap 1SynthesisGap 2MitosisCytokinesisMitosis is the process by which the original cell (parent cell) divides to create an exact copy of the original cell (daughter cell). The mitotic cell cycle is composed of 5 stages that allow the cell to produce a "clone" of the original cell. The cell cycle proceeds as follows: Gap 1, Synthesis, Gap 2, Mitosis, and Cytokinesis. The first grouping of stages known as interphase, contains the first 3 of the 5 cell cycle stages.
he mitotic cell cycle is as follows:Gap 1SynthesisGap 2MitosisCytokinesisMitosis is the process by which the original cell (parent cell) divides to create an exact copy of the original cell (daughter cell). The mitotic cell cycle is composed of 5 stages that allow the cell to produce a "clone" of the original cell. The cell cycle proceeds as follows: Gap 1, Synthesis, Gap 2, Mitosis, and Cytokinesis. The first grouping of stages known as interphase, contains the first 3 of the 5 cell cycle stages.
he mitotic cell cycle is as follows:Gap 1SynthesisGap 2MitosisCytokinesisMitosis is the process by which the original cell (parent cell) divides to create an exact copy of the original cell (daughter cell). The mitotic cell cycle is composed of 5 stages that allow the cell to produce a "clone" of the original cell. The cell cycle proceeds as follows: Gap 1, Synthesis, Gap 2, Mitosis, and Cytokinesis. The first grouping of stages known as interphase, contains the first 3 of the 5 cell cycle stages.
he mitotic cell cycle is as follows:Gap 1SynthesisGap 2MitosisCytokinesisMitosis is the process by which the original cell (parent cell) divides to create an exact copy of the original cell (daughter cell). The mitotic cell cycle is composed of 5 stages that allow the cell to produce a "clone" of the original cell. The cell cycle proceeds as follows: Gap 1, Synthesis, Gap 2, Mitosis, and Cytokinesis. The first grouping of stages known as interphase, contains the first 3 of the 5 cell cycle stages.
he mitotic cell cycle is as follows:Gap 1SynthesisGap 2MitosisCytokinesisMitosis is the process by which the original cell (parent cell) divides to create an exact copy of the original cell (daughter cell). The mitotic cell cycle is composed of 5 stages that allow the cell to produce a "clone" of the original cell. The cell cycle proceeds as follows: Gap 1, Synthesis, Gap 2, Mitosis, and Cytokinesis. The first grouping of stages known as interphase, contains the first 3 of the 5 cell cycle stages.
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).
Nucleus division