In Mitosis it is important that the daughter cells be identical to the parent cell because if it isn't a mutation will occur.
For instance, if a skin cell undergoes mitosis and doesn't produce an exact copy for the daughter cell, the mutated daughter cell could now give rise to skin cancer.
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DNA
The daughter cells have the same # of chromosomes & the same amount of DNA
the daughter cells' chromosomes are a identical to the parent cell. they each have a complete set
The daughter cells resulting in mitotic cell division are genetically identical to the mother cell. This means that they have the same amount of chromosomes, which are replicated in the mother cell prior to splitting.
Meiosis will produce 4 cells that are not identical to the parent cell but are identical to each other.
In mitotic cell division, the daughter cells contain the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell. In meiotic cell division, the daughter cells contain half the number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
Daughter cells are identical to the parent cell.
mitosis ends with 2 identical daughter cells and meiosis ends with 4 non-identical sister chromatids.
This process is called cell division or mitosis.
The daughter cells produced by mitosis and cytokinesis are genetically identical.
It is said that in meiosis, the daughter cells are not identical, cause the daughters cells have a combination of both parents' chromosomes. In the cell cycle they are identical.
A mitotic division results in the formation of two daughter cells that are identical to the parent cell. The parent cell divides into the two daughter cells. The newly formed cells have diploid number of chromosomes (just like the parent cell)
Daughter cells are identical to their parent cells in mitosis. During this form of cell division, somatic cells separate into two identical daughter cells.
In mitosis, daughter cells are exactly like the parent cell (identical copies). In meiosis, daughter cells are different but similar in the fact that the chromosomes have undergone crossing over, giving genetic variability. Thus producing a "recombined" daughter cell and essentially not identical to the parent cell.
DNA
Mitosis followed by cytokinesis results in two genetically identical, diploid daughter cells. Meiosis followed by cytokinesis results in four genetically non-identical, haploid daughter cells.
The daughter cells have the same # of chromosomes & the same amount of DNA
A cell that undergoes mitosis, such as a bacteria cell, splits to create an identical cell (daughter cell) that has identical DNA. So, when a cells split to multiply and grow, there DNA is the same, unless a mutation occurs.