Mitosis
If you mean when "does" the nucleus divide to form two identical nuclei, the answer is during mitosis. Mitosis is the process of cell reproduction. During this process the DNA is duplicated before the nucleus spilts into two identical nuclei each with their own identical copy of the parent cell, creating two new identical daughter cells.
Mitosis is a process in cell division where a single cell divides into two identical daughter cells. It is essential for growth, repair, and maintenance of multicellular organisms. During mitosis, the cell's nucleus divides, ensuring that each new cell gets an identical set of chromosomes.
The amoeba usually reproduces asexually by a process called binary fission (splitting in two), in which the cytoplasm simply pinches in half and pulls apart to form two identical organisms (daughter cells). This occurs after the parent amoeba's genetic (hereditary) material, contained in the nucleus, is replicated and the nucleus divides (a process known as mitosis). Thus, the hereditary material is identical in the two daughter cells. If an amoeba is cut in two, the half that contains the nucleus can survive and form new cytoplasm. The half without a nucleus soon dies. This demonstrates the importance of the nucleus in reproduction. Balaji. J M.Sc Microbiology
the division of a cell's nucleus.
Mistosis is not a recognized biological term. It may be a misspelling or error. If you meant mitosis, it is the process in cell division where a cell's nucleus divides into two nuclei, each with the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell. This process is essential for growth, repair, and asexual reproduction in organisms.
Fisson
You get identical twins!
the answer is mitosis!
twins
(genetics) cell division that produces reproductive cells in sexually reproducing organisms; the nucleus divides into four nuclei each containing ...
It is called Mitosis but the certain stage of it is Telophase.
The process you are referring to is somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT), also known as cloning. In SCNT, the nucleus of a somatic cell (cell without a nucleus) from one adult organism is transferred into an enucleated egg cell from another adult organism. This can be used for research purposes or to produce genetically identical organisms.
If you mean when "does" the nucleus divide to form two identical nuclei, the answer is during mitosis. Mitosis is the process of cell reproduction. During this process the DNA is duplicated before the nucleus spilts into two identical nuclei each with their own identical copy of the parent cell, creating two new identical daughter cells.
Eukaryotes are the organisms that have a membrane bound nucleus.
Mitosis is a process in cell division where a single cell divides into two identical daughter cells. It is essential for growth, repair, and maintenance of multicellular organisms. During mitosis, the cell's nucleus divides, ensuring that each new cell gets an identical set of chromosomes.
Cell division specifically involving the nucleus is called mitosis. Mitosis is a process where a cell duplicates its chromosomes and divides into two identical daughter cells.
The amoeba usually reproduces asexually by a process called binary fission (splitting in two), in which the cytoplasm simply pinches in half and pulls apart to form two identical organisms (daughter cells). This occurs after the parent amoeba's genetic (hereditary) material, contained in the nucleus, is replicated and the nucleus divides (a process known as mitosis). Thus, the hereditary material is identical in the two daughter cells. If an amoeba is cut in two, the half that contains the nucleus can survive and form new cytoplasm. The half without a nucleus soon dies. This demonstrates the importance of the nucleus in reproduction. Balaji. J M.Sc Microbiology