Mitosis in animal cells
Centrioles are present
Aster formation occurs
Cell plate does not form
Furrowing of cytoplasm occurs
Occurs mainly in meristems
Mitosis in plant cells
Centrioles are absent
There is no aster formation
Cell plate is formed
Furrowing of cytoplasm does not occur
Occurs in all tissues of the body
the job of the fibers is to hold the chromosomes .
like you can see the mitosis is the result of something green so it has no feature.
Yes - both plant and animal cells undergo mitosis.
Animal cells separate by CYTOKINESIS while plant cells must grow a new cell wall for separation called a CELL PLATE.
spindle
In meiosis or mitosis they are called spindle fibers which are "anchored" using centrioles.
In animal cells... Centrioles, asters and the spindle fibers.
Centrioles do that purpose. They are only in animal cells
During mitosis, protein fibers attach to the chromosomes on opposite ends of the cell, then help to pull them apart so that the cell can divide into daughter cells with copies of all the chromosomes.
only animals have centrioles
true
In animal cells... Centrioles, asters and the spindle fibers.
Spindle fibers form from centrioles of animal cells during chromosomal separation in mitosis. These fibers elongate to reach the kinetochores of chromosomes, and then retract via depolymerization from each end of the dividing cell leading into cytokinesis.
A plant cell, during mitosis, has no centriole, so in the second phase [metaphase], spindle fibers do not connect to the [missing] centriole that move in opposite directions in animal cell mitosis. Also, instead of having a cleavage, like in animal cell mitosis, a cell plate forms. Animal cells do not have centrioles so the spindle fibers do not connect to centrioles and move to opposite poles, spindle fibers are instead formed by microtubules. Additionally, in the telophase in plant cells, the cytoplasm does not narrow or compress, a cell plate is instead formed in the centre of the cell and this divides it into two daughter cells.
In meiosis or mitosis they are called spindle fibers which are "anchored" using centrioles.
Centrioles. They are visible during metaphase, the second stage of mitosis. Added: Centrosomes. Centrioles are present in animal cells but are, seemingly, not needed to mount a spindle apparatus. Plant cells get along very well without centrioles.
In animal cells... Centrioles, asters and the spindle fibers.
Used during Meiosis and Mitosis, only in animals. Helps with cell division.
Dividing plant cells lack centrioles. Centrioles are barrel shaped and found in animal cells. They replicated during mitosis and produce spindle fibers.
Centrioles do that purpose. They are only in animal cells
Spindle fibers
During mitosis, protein fibers attach to the chromosomes on opposite ends of the cell, then help to pull them apart so that the cell can divide into daughter cells with copies of all the chromosomes.