This is a stage in most cell divisions. The genetic material has to replicate first.
no. prokaryotic cells do not have any membrane-bound structures. only Eukaryotic cells have them. Prokaryotes lack a nucleous, an endomembrane system (RER and SER), or any type of organelle (mitochindria/chloroplast). They are composed of a cytoplasmic membrane, a cell wall, a nucleiod (a circular genome), and ribosomes.
anaphase is when the centrosomes start to pull the sister chromatids apart. Telephase is when the cell actually divides in 2
the centrioles. two of these together are a centrosome which release the microtubules in the cell division. the microtubules are what "grab" the chromosomes and pull them apart into chromotids in metaphase and anaphase in mitosis.
Interphase; the entire genome is duplicated. Prophase; chromosomes condense into their 'X' shapes. Metaphase; they line up in the center of the cell. Anaphase; they're pulled apart. Telophase; a new nucleus membrane and cell membrane are constructed, the two new cells pull apart.
single cell divides into two cell and chromosomes are mulilied
The rigidity of the plant cell's cell wall cannot 'pinch' together like an animal cell can when it divides. The cell plate forms a barrier instead, so it is similar to the cell pinching itself apart, but just as efficient.
You zoom in simply just by spreading your fingers apart, hold them together then pull the apart to zoom out again simply do the same action but in a sort of pinching motion...
Not the opposite, but the complementary form, is grabbing.The opposite of pinching would be spreading, as can be seen when working with torn materials, or such forms as buttonholes : pinching it closes a hole, spreading it opens the hole.The opposite of a pinching motion (e.g. fingers coming together) would be a "spreading" motion (e.g. fingers moving apart).A motion close to this anatomically is a flicking motion (fingers together are moved outward.
I have never heard of a furrow but furrowing is the process during cell replication when an animal cell splits into 2 new cells by "pinching" the 2 halves of the cell apart down the center of the cytoplasm.
A membrane is apart of a animal or plant cell.
During cell division the chromosomes are copied and they form sister chromatids. Then the mitotic spindle attaches to the sister chromatids and pulls them apart, splitting the nucleus in two. Then the cell goes through cytokenesis and the cell membrane is pinched together in the center, this divides the organelles and the cytoplasm between the two daughter cells.
The cell membrane keeps the cell from falling apart and helps it stay intact.
NO, together you get mad, apart, you do better. sex
protein layers
take it apart and then put it together the right way take it apart and then put it together the right way take it apart and then put it together the right way
They wrap them together.
It begins to dissolve. Some sort of signal is sent to the Nucleolus to start dissolving it's membrane.