Spindle fibers from the centrioles attach to the chromosomes and pull in opposite directions at the metaphesal plate.
the spindle fibers
Centrioles
it is used to separates chromosomes pairs during mitosis.
spindle fibers separate chromosomes during mitosis and meiosis
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.
During mitosis and meiosis the spindle fibers allow the chromosomes to line up along the equator of the cell. The chromosomes slide to either pole during cell division.
the spindle fibers
Spindle fibers.
Chromosomes align on the spindle equator during the metaphase. During the metaphase the chromosomes meet on an imaginary line between the two poles.
Kinetochore fibers are thought to move chromosomes.
Centrioles
Spindle fibers attach to chromosomes during mitosis. Specifically, they do so in the metaphase portion of mitosis, in preparation for the splitting of the cell.
During mitosis a double-stranded chromosome attaches to a spindle fiber centromere.
Spindle fibers move chromosomes to the center of the cell during metaphase of cell division and break the chromosomes apart during Anaphase.
Metaphase is when chromosomes attatch to spindle fibers in the phase of mitosis.
The mitotic/meiotic spindle originating from the centrosomes and composed of microtubule subunits. Kinetochores provide the motive power.Read more: What_structure_is_responsible_for_moving_the_chromosomes_during
it is used to separates chromosomes pairs during mitosis.