The five cell cycles are:
Telophase
(Cell wall pinches in, nuclear membranes are formed, two daughter cells are produced.)
Interphase
(You can cell the nucleolus, you can see uncoiled chromatin, you cannot see chromosomes.)
Prophase
(Chromatin uncoils, chromosomes appear, chromosomes duplicate to form sister chromatids, spindle forms between centrioles.)
Metaphase
(Chromosomes move to the middle of spindles.)
Anaphase
(Sister chromatids are pulled to opposite sides of cell, each chromatid is now a chromosome.)
the brain cell
m-phase and interphase
Plant cells
No. DNA synthesis occurs in the S phase. Cells in the G0 phase are not preparing for cell division.
During interphase, the cell grows and makes a copy of its DNA. During the mitotic (M) phase, the cell separates its DNA into two sets and divides its cytoplasm, forming two new cells.
The two main phases of cell cycles are the interphase and the mitotic phase.
m-phase and interphase
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.
Plant cells
the S phase
For different functions. For example, intestinal cells have short cell cycles because they constantly have to multiply to replace dead or destroyed intestinal cells. Neurons have long cell cycles, because they don't have to multiply and have to last the life of the person.
No. DNA synthesis occurs in the S phase. Cells in the G0 phase are not preparing for cell division.
The G2 phase is the third phase of the cell cycle. The cells do not stop growing in the G2 phase. In fact, during this period the cells grow rapidly to prepare for cell division.
During interphase, the cell grows and makes a copy of its DNA. During the mitotic (M) phase, the cell separates its DNA into two sets and divides its cytoplasm, forming two new cells.
metaphase
it is Interphase
It is the metaphase.