so we can look cool :p
No, multicellular organism cells do not all divide at the same rate. The rate of cell division varies depending on the type of cell, its location in the body, and its specific function. Some cells may divide frequently, while others may divide rarely or not at all.
G1 = gap one. The newly formed daughter cell grows by adding cytoplasm and organelles. The cell performs its normal activities, depending on what kind of cell it is. Some cells never divide, and they spend their entire lives in G1. S = synthesis. The DNA is replicated to prepare for cell division. Replication means that the DNA is copied exactly so there are two complete sets of DNA to divide up. G2 = gap two. The cell grows more to get ready to divide.
cells have to divide during mitosis because if they grow too large, materials that pass through the selectively permeable membrane will take to long to get to the organelle that it needs to get to. and when that happens the cell(s) die and your body cannot properly function and you will eventually die
The rate of cell division and growth can vary depending on the cell type and environmental conditions. For example, cancer cells typically divide and grow rapidly, while some specialized cells in the human body, such as nerve cells, divide and grow very slowly or not at all.
There are many different reasons why things divide. Some people or countries divide over moral issues that they cannot solve.
Scar tissue
If a cell population is unable to divide, when some members die they are not replaced. This can lead to a decrease in overall cell number and potentially lead to tissue atrophy or dysfunction.
Most of the cell's life is spent in interphase. The cell increases in size, then replicates its DNA. After some additional growth, the cell is ready to divide. Mitotic division occurs and the two daughter cells each return to interphase. Some cells enter senescence and cease to divide.
so we can look cool :p
This depends on the type and grade of cancer. Some cancers divide and spread quite quickly, others may take quite a bit longer to become clinically significant.
uncategorized
This depends greatly depending on the cell, some cells divide every few hours while others last for life
No, multicellular organism cells do not all divide at the same rate. The rate of cell division varies depending on the type of cell, its location in the body, and its specific function. Some cells may divide frequently, while others may divide rarely or not at all.
just say i want braces and give reasons why and also tell them why you need them with reasons too
Guns don't "give" anybody anything.
G1 = gap one. The newly formed daughter cell grows by adding cytoplasm and organelles. The cell performs its normal activities, depending on what kind of cell it is. Some cells never divide, and they spend their entire lives in G1. S = synthesis. The DNA is replicated to prepare for cell division. Replication means that the DNA is copied exactly so there are two complete sets of DNA to divide up. G2 = gap two. The cell grows more to get ready to divide.