During mitosis, chromosomes are in their most condensed form during metaphase
Chromatin condenses into chromosomes during prophase, the first phase of mitosis, and prophase I in meiosis.
in the prophase
This happens in prophase.
Prophase
prophase
Prophase
Metaphase
The chromosomes coil up and condense during prophase
Yes, they do
Yes, you can think of chromosomes tightly wound up DNA and chromatin as unwound DNA.
During prophase, chromatin threads condense,coil, shorten and thicken into chromatids, but how do the chromsomes of parent cells turn into the chromatin threads
chromatin
Chromatin can't "condense of" anything, chromatin can condense into Chromosomes.
The phase of mitosis where the chromatin fibers duplicate and condense into visible chromosomes is Interphase. Interphase is the first stage of the cell cycle.
The chromosomes coil up and condense during prophase
The chromosomes condense during prophase, the first stage of both mitosis and meiosis.
Yes, they do
Chromatin Chromatin
Cells condense their chromatin into chromosomes only when cell division is occurring
In prophase stage, the replicated chromosomes condense and the nuclear envelope disappears. Earlier in prophase, chromatin visible condenses into the chromosomes.
yes, during prophase
Yes, you can think of chromosomes tightly wound up DNA and chromatin as unwound DNA.
During prophase, chromatin threads condense,coil, shorten and thicken into chromatids, but how do the chromsomes of parent cells turn into the chromatin threads
PROPHASE