Mitotic Cell division; a Somatic Cell replicates [duplicates] Itself. Only in the ultra-specialized reproductive organs [male and female] does Mitosis Itself Re-Divide to form four Gametic Cells from one Original Cell - this is known as Meiosis.
Human cells divide through a process called "cell division". Cell division can be separated into two categories: mitosis and meiosis. Cell division usually refers to mitosis, the fundamental process of creating new body cells, in which a cell splits it's contents (including chromosomes) to form two identical daughter cells. Meiosis refers to the creation of gametes, a two-step process in which a cell reorganizes and reduces it's chromosomal count by half.
Mitosis when they are dividing to make skin cells, etc. When creating reproductive cells they go through meiosis.
I'm not quite sure what you're asking but I think what you mean is Mitosis.
The process is called: Mitosis.
mitosis
Cells that no longer divide are called senescent cells. Senescence occurs when the telomeres found in the DNA of organisms become too short.
they divide and grow by undergoing a process called as mitosis
Yes, endothelial cells divide. It is important that these cells divide to replace old/dead cells and to create new blood vessels.
The cells divide into two daughter cells, to make way for replication.
Somatic cells divide in order for organisms to grow and replace the cells that die.
It is called mitosis when regular cells divide. It is called meiosis when sex cells divide.
mitosis
mitosis
mites
Well they divide in your body but in during a process called Mitosis.
The parent cells divide in the meristem or growing region. The locale is called the Cleavage Furrow.
Plasma cells.
Cells that no longer divide are called senescent cells. Senescence occurs when the telomeres found in the DNA of organisms become too short.
interphase
miosis
Yes Mitosis is what it is called
meiotic division