yes they can
Somatic cells undergo Mitosis. The nucleus and all its contents have to be replicated (copied) and divided into the daughter cells. The process where the nucleus divides is called karyokinesis
Mitosis happens in the body cell'sIt happens in somatic cells. Only sex cell producing cells undergo meiosis
There are two daughter cells produced after all the stages of mitosis. These daughter cells are genetically identical to the original nucleus.
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 Eukaryote cells. An example of a cell that would undergo mitosis would be an injured skin cell. Don't get mitosis confused with meiosis, however. Mitosis is non-sexual reproduction, while Meiosis is sexual.
No, not all cells go through mitosis. Mitosis is a form of cell division that occurs in somatic cells to produce two identical daughter cells. However, cells such as sex cells (sperm and egg cells) go through a different type of cell division called meiosis.
Somatic cells undergo Mitosis. The nucleus and all its contents have to be replicated (copied) and divided into the daughter cells. The process where the nucleus divides is called karyokinesis
Mitosis happens in the body cell'sIt happens in somatic cells. Only sex cell producing cells undergo meiosis
All cells in your body are constantly going through mitosis. Mitosis is the division of cells to make an exact replica of itself. Mainly your cells go through mitosis if a cell dies or gets injured.
No. There are certain organisms that do not go through cytokinesis and the resulting phenomena is that the organisms cells will contain more than one nucleus (aka multinucleated)
Nearly all eukaryotic cells go through mitosis to divide. Being more specific: in humans, somatic (body) cells go through mitosis.
All the cells that divide in your body, except for sex cells, which divide through meiosis, divide by mitosis.
There are two daughter cells produced after all the stages of mitosis. These daughter cells are genetically identical to the original nucleus.
Usually, only eukaryotes, such as the human cell, go through mitosis, and because most bacteria, prokaryotes, are single celled organisms, there's usually no need to go through all the complexities of mitosis, when they could just split and reform itself into its own duplicate.
if by division you mean mitosis then all cells except sex cells go through mitosis. Sex cells go through meiosis. Mitosis is basically the process of a cell splitting into 2 daughter cells.
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.
1st answer) i think all cells go through mitosis the process of cell division 2nd answer) Mostly all cells go through mitosis, but sex or reproductive cells go through meiosis instead.