The answer is metaphase
Metaphase.
The contractile ring pinches a dividing cell into two new cells by the action of myosin ll moving along the action philaments.
Virchow discovered mitosis along with meiosis in the productive year of 1876
Mutations can be passed down to offspring through meiosis, not mitosis.
Metaphase
Metaphase.
Metaphase
Metaphase (:
metophase
The contractile ring pinches a dividing cell into two new cells by the action of myosin ll moving along the action philaments.
The chromosomes are aligned along the middle of the cell during metaphase of mitosis. For more information on mitosis, see the link, further down this page, listed under Related Links.
Mitosis
During metaphase - the second stage of mitosis in the eukaryotic cell cycle - the chromosomes, pulled by the spindle fibers, line up along the middle of the cell, halfway between the centrosomes in the middle of the dividing cell. The chromosomes are now maximally condensed. In mitosis, individual replicated chromosomes, each composed of two sister chromatids, move to the equatorial plate during this step (whereas during the first division of meiosis, pairs of replicated chromosomes (tetrads) line up at this stage). This lack of pairing between homologs during mitosis is a fundamental distinction between mitosis and meiosis. Mitosis, unlike meiosis, produces identical daughter cells, because each homolog divides into two identical chromatids during anaphase.
Virchow discovered mitosis along with meiosis in the productive year of 1876
In Mitosis and Meiosis, this event is called Metaphase.
Mutations can be passed down to offspring through meiosis, not mitosis.
Metaphase 1 is the phase of mitosis when the chromosomes line up along the equator. Homologous chromosomes line up in the middle of the cell, then spindle fibers attach onto the homologous chromosome.
Metaphase :)