Most cells in the body are capable of undergoing mitosis, with exceptions such as mature red blood cells and certain brain cells that are terminally differentiated and do not divide. Skin cells, gut cells, and immune cells are examples of cells that regularly undergo mitosis for growth, repair, and maintenance of tissues.
No, bacteria do not perform mitosis. They reproduce through a process called binary fission, where a single cell divides into two identical daughter cells. Mitosis is a type of cell division that occurs in eukaryotic cells, not in prokaryotic cells like bacteria.
All somatic cells in the body undergo mitosis for growth, repair, and maintenance. These include skin cells, muscle cells, and blood cells.
Somatic cells, which make up the majority of cells in the human body, reproduce through mitosis. Mitosis is a type of cell division that results in two daughter cells, each with the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
Somatic cells, or body cells, undergo mitosis. These cells divide to produce two genetically identical daughter cells for growth, repair, and maintenance of the organism.
Mitosis is the type of cell division which takes place during growth, repair and asexual reproduction. So the types of cells produced are normal body cells eg skin, brain, muscle, bone, liver etc, in other words they are not reproductive cells. Cells produced by mitosis are exact copies of the parent cell: they have the same number of chromosomes and the same genes. Reproductive cells (eggs and sperm) are produced by the alternative type of cell division called meiosis.
Either sex cells or body cells. Sex cells perform mieosis, and body cels perform mitosis.
Brain cells
mitosis.. it helps in somatic cell divisions..
Brain cells
No, bacteria do not perform mitosis. They reproduce through a process called binary fission, where a single cell divides into two identical daughter cells. Mitosis is a type of cell division that occurs in eukaryotic cells, not in prokaryotic cells like bacteria.
Somatic cells would be the general term describing the type of cells undergoing mitosis in a human. These are the any cells in the body that are not specialized for reproduction and undergo mitosis for growth, repair, and maintenance.
All somatic cells in the body undergo mitosis for growth, repair, and maintenance. These include skin cells, muscle cells, and blood cells.
Somatic cells, which make up the majority of cells in the human body, reproduce through mitosis. Mitosis is a type of cell division that results in two daughter cells, each with the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell.
All somatic or body cells can undergo mitosis. But only mature RBC and the cells that produce sex cells are not able to divide through mitosis.We had learned that nerve cells and other special cells can't under mitosis but new research says otherwise.
Mitosis occurs in eukaryotic cells, which are cells with a defined nucleus and membrane-bound organelles. Most multicellular organisms go through mitosis during growth, repair, and asexual reproduction.
Somatic cells, or body cells, undergo mitosis. These cells divide to produce two genetically identical daughter cells for growth, repair, and maintenance of the organism.
Meiosis only occurs in sex cells, which are the sperm and egg cells. Mitosis occurs in the somatic, or body, cells.