In fact diploid cells are divided by meiosis. The process of meiosis is to divide a diploid cell into four haploid cells to produce gametes.
In the second stage of meiosis it divides the two cell into to equal parts without duplicating the new genetic material. If you did this with a haploid cell, you would end up with a 1/4 of the original number of chromosomes. For example if a human haploid chromosome divided it would only have 11.5 chromosomes.
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
spermatogonia. These are the diploid cells found in the testes that undergo mitosis followed by meiosis to produce haploid sperm cells.
mitosis
In meiosis, the process is initiated by germ cells (sperm and egg cells) that undergo specialized cell division to produce gametes. In mitosis, somatic cells throughout the body can undergo cell division for growth, repair, and maintenance.
Diploid Cells
Haploid. They may be diploid when they are first formed, but by the time they undergo all the stages of mitosis, they are haploid.
No, haploid cells cannot undergo mitosis. Mitosis is a type of cell division that occurs in diploid cells, which have two sets of chromosomes. Haploid cells only have one set of chromosomes and undergo 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 typically starts with diploid cells.
Mitosis produces DIPLOID cells- remember in mitosis your INCREASING the number of CELLS but the chromosome number is the SAME as the parentso a parent that has a (DIPLOID number of 10)will produce at the end of mitosis will produce 2 children with a diploid number of (10)That is why Mitosis is CONSERVATIVE.So in actuality, 1 diploid cell will produce 2 diploid cells in mitosisThe above is only true if the starting cell is itself diploid. However there are plenty of instances, especially in plants, in which cells that are haploid (the ones that give rise to pollen and egg, and endosperm nuclei, for example) or multiploid (hexaploid wheat, for example) undergo mitosis, and the cells that are produced have the same ploidy as the starting cell. Always. As noted above, mitosis is conservative. However, you ought not assume that you started with a diploid cell.
spermatogonia. These are the diploid cells found in the testes that undergo mitosis followed by meiosis to produce haploid sperm cells.
The types of cells that do not undergo mitosis are nerve cells and muscle cells.
mitosis
In meiosis, the process is initiated by germ cells (sperm and egg cells) that undergo specialized cell division to produce gametes. In mitosis, somatic cells throughout the body can undergo cell division for growth, repair, and maintenance.
The type of cells that do not undergo mitosis are mature nerve cells and muscle cells.
Yes, diploid cells do have chromosomes. These cells are created during mitosis.
Diploid Cells