Sister Chromatids separate during anaphase.
Chromatids separate during the anaphase stage of mitosis. This is when sister chromatids are pulled to opposite poles of the cell by the spindle fibers, leading to the formation of two identical daughter chromosomes.
anaphase
The cell structure that joins two sister chromatids into one single chromosome is called the centromere. This is at the center of the sister chromatids.
In Meiosis I: Separates homologous chromosomes In Meiosis II: Separates sister chromatids
Sister chromatids are the chromatids that are attached at the centromere. Sister chromatids are two identical copies of a chromosome produced during DNA replication, and they remain attached until they are separated during cell division.
Yes, sister chromatids have the same genes within them.
Yes, sister chromatids separate during mitosis.
In Meiosis, Anaphase 2 sister chromatids (individual strands) separate and one of each duplicate goes to each side of the cell.
The cell structure that joins two sister chromatids into one single chromosome is called the centromere. This is at the center of the sister chromatids.
Sister chromatids dont over cuz they dont look it up lmfao
Yes, sister chromatids have the same alleles within a chromosome.
Crossing-over occurs between non-sister chromatids, since (prior to crossing-over) sister chromatids are genetically identical (i.e. one is a duplication of the other). Therefore, if sister chromatids underwent a cross-over, no genetic variation would occur.