as the furrow gets very narrow, the spindle fibers then are pressed toghther into a tight bundle causing a stembody.
It depends on what kind of furrow. Deep furrows are typically just a side effect of tillage operations. Medium furrows can be used for irrigation or guiding a farm implement. Shallow furrows might be used to plant seeds in, or to apply fertilizer. There are nearly as many purposes for furrows as there are types of farming.
Microfilaments are well known for their role in cell movement and shape changes, such as in cell division, muscle contraction, and cell migration. They are also involved in maintaining cell structure and providing mechanical support.
Nuclear division plays a role in cell division.
all of the cell because all of the cell needs to split in half. but, the cytoplasm is the most needed
At the stage of cytokinesis during mitosis, plant cells develop cell plates, while animal cells form cleavage furrows. The cell plate is formed by vesicles that fuse at the center of the dividing cell, eventually leading to the formation of a new cell wall that separates the two daughter cells. In contrast, cleavage furrows pinch the cell membrane inward to divide the cytoplasm in animal cells. This distinction is crucial for the successful division of cells in these two types of organisms.
It helps divide DNA during cell division!! :) <3
Yes, microfilaments are involved in forming cleavage furrows during cytokinesis in animal cells. Actin filaments assemble into a contractile ring structure that contracts to pinch the cell into two daughter cells.
in animal cells, as daughter cells pinch into two cells, there is a space between the cells called a furrow. as the furrow gets increasingly narrower, the spindle fibers are pressed into a tight bundle, called a stembody!!!
the division of a cell's nucleus.
the division of a cell's nucleus.
Animal cells!
Actin and myosin are the primary cytoskeletal proteins involved in the contractile structures that form the cleavage furrows during animal cell cytokinesis. These proteins interact to generate the force necessary for the cell to physically split into two daughter cells during cell division.