The phase of the cell cycle that the type of brain cells are in is Metaphase.
The phase of the cell cycle that the type of brain cells are in is Metaphase.
The types of cells in question 12 are at the G1 phase of the cell cycle, which is the first gap phase after cell division. In this phase, cells grow, carry out normal functions, and prepare for DNA replication in the subsequent S phase.
Cells that are no longer undergoing mitosis are typically in the G0 phase of the cell cycle. This is a resting phase where cells are not actively dividing but still carry out their normal functions. Cells can remain in this phase for extended periods or resume the cell cycle in response to certain signals.
mitosis - interphase - prophase - metaphase - anaphase - telophase - cytokinesis
The cells in G0 phase do not go through mitosis whatsoever. These cells only do what they are initially suppose to do, and do not prepare for a division. Many cells in your body are like this. Brain cells are in G0 phase and do not EVER replace itself. However, many cells may also trigger its phase from G0 phase to G1 phase when more cells are needed. When a liver is critically damaged, the liver cells are triggered back to G1 phase to replenish its lost cells. When this is complete, it goes back to being in G0 phase.
The three types of cells that enter the G0 phase when they are mature are neurons, muscle cells, and certain types of immune cells like memory B and T cells. These cells have exited the cell cycle and are in a resting phase, performing their specialized functions without actively dividing.
mitosis - interphase - prophase - metaphase - anaphase - telophase - cytokinesis
nerve cells
The brain is composed of two types of cells, neurons and glial cells.
The brain is composed of two types of cells, nerve cells and glial cells.
All phase specific types are by definition cell cycle specific? But does it work the other way around? (i.e. are there any types that are only cell cycle specific but not phase dependent?) Would like to now about the four main types of chemo. Alkylating agents - cell cycle independent Mitotic inhibitors - phase dependent? Topoisomerase inhibitors - both phase dependent and/or cell cycle dependent? Antimetabolites - phase specific?
Neurological cells are cells found in the brain. They are called neurons and transmit messages and pulses throughout the brain.