yes,yes,no
No, cell elongation typically occurs during interphase, the period between cell divisions. During mitosis, the cell undergoes a series of highly regulated steps to divide its genetic material and cytoplasm into two daughter cells, but elongation is not a common feature of this process.
Cells formed during mitosis are called daughter cells. These cells are genetically identical to the parent cell from which they were formed.
Spindle fibers form from centrioles of animal cells during chromosomal separation in mitosis. These fibers elongate to reach the kinetochores of chromosomes, and then retract via depolymerization from each end of the dividing cell leading into cytokinesis.
Chromatids in eukaryotic cells separate during the process of mitosis or meiosis. In mitosis, chromatids separate during anaphase to form individual chromosomes, while in meiosis, chromatids separate during anaphase II to produce haploid daughter cells.
Yes. Mitosis is the process of cells separated or dividing to create more cells. this could be dangerous if a cell is mutated and it goes through mitosis producing more mutated cells.
telophase
cytoplasm
during interphase
In cells during cell division.
Somatic cells, which are the body's non-reproductive cells, undergo mitosis during cell division.
Mitosis is used as a noun in sentences. Nerve cells rarely undergo mitosis.
Yes, but they do not pair up during mitosis as they do in meiosis.