Anaphase
is it two chromatids or spindles
The process that uses spindle fibers to separate chromatids is called anaphase. During anaphase, the spindle fibers pull sister chromatids apart towards opposite poles of the cell, ensuring each daughter cell receives an identical set of chromosomes.
The mitotic spindle, comprised of microtubules, guides and pulls chromosomes during mitosis. The spindle fibers attach to the centromeres of sister chromatids and help separate them to opposite poles of the cell during cell division.
the spindles attach to chromosomes and centrioles
Spindles
Chromatids are held together by a protein complex called the cohesin complex. The attachment of chromatids to the spindle fibers is mediated by protein structures called kinetochores, which assemble on the centromere region of the chromatids. These interactions are crucial for the accurate segregation of chromosomes during cell division.
Spindle fibers attach to the centromeres on the sister chromatids.
is it two chromatids or spindles
During metaphase, the spindles, or microtubules, all start to move to opposite ends. There, they grab the chromatids and pull them back to their opposite sides.
Well the actual process of Mitosis is involved with cell division. Interphase: DNA is replicated. Early Prophase: Nuclear membrane disintegrates. Late Prophase: Chromosomes appear in as double-chromatids. Spindles form. Metaphase: The spindles organise the chromosomes on the equator of the cell. Anaphase: Chromosomes segregate, pulling the chromatids apart. Late Anaphase: Single chromatids are drawn to the centrosomes. Telophase: Two nuclei form. The cell plate forms across the midline of the parent cell. Cytokinesis: Division of cytoplasm is complete. The two daughter cells are separate.
The process that uses spindle fibers to separate chromatids is called anaphase. During anaphase, the spindle fibers pull sister chromatids apart towards opposite poles of the cell, ensuring each daughter cell receives an identical set of chromosomes.
The two identical strands of a chromosome are called chromatids. DNA replication occurs in the interphase stage of the cell cycle.
The mitotic spindle, comprised of microtubules, guides and pulls chromosomes during mitosis. The spindle fibers attach to the centromeres of sister chromatids and help separate them to opposite poles of the cell during cell division.
Spindles
The stage of mitosis that splits the chromosomes and pulls them apart with spindle fibers is called anaphase. In anaphase, the sister chromatids separate and are moved towards opposite poles of the cell by the spindle fibers, ensuring each daughter cell receives a complete set of chromosomes.
The five cell cycles are: Telophase (Cell wall pinches in, nuclear membranes are formed, two daughter cells are produced.) Interphase (You can cell the nucleolus, you can see uncoiled chromatin, you cannot see chromosomes.) Prophase (Chromatin uncoils, chromosomes appear, chromosomes duplicate to form sister chromatids, spindle forms between centrioles.) Metaphase (Chromosomes move to the middle of spindles.) Anaphase (Sister chromatids are pulled to opposite sides of cell, each chromatid is now a chromosome.)
Spindles