telophase
telophase
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.
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.
mitosis - interphase - prophase - metaphase - anaphase - telophase - cytokinesis
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.
The two types of cell cycle genes that cause cancer cells to divide uncontrollably if mutated are called tumor suppressor genes and antioncogene
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.
Yes, some types of human cells, such as neurons and cardiac muscle cells, are considered post-mitotic, meaning they no longer divide after maturation. These cells have exited the cell cycle and have limited regenerative capacity.
mitosis - interphase - prophase - metaphase - anaphase - telophase - cytokinesis
No, it is only able to replicate and fulfill the cell cycle in creating two new identical daughter cells. :D
There are many types of classifications, but the answer to your question is probably eukaryotes and prokaryotes. (However, it could be diploid and haploid or even just red blood cells and white blood cells).