telophase
Chromosomes move towards the middle during metaphase of mitosis. This is when the spindle fibers align the chromosomes along the equator of the cell.
Chromosomes unduplicate during the anaphase stage of mitosis. This is when the sister chromatids separate and move towards opposite poles of the cell, ensuring that each daughter cell receives a complete set of unduplicated chromosomes.
Metaphase
The phase of mitosis during which chromosomes move to the middle of the cell is called the metaphase. In metaphase, the chromosomes align along the metaphase plate, forming the spindle apparatus. This alignment ensures that each daughter cell receives the correct number of chromosomes during cell division.
Anaphase is the stage of cell division where sister chromatids separate and move towards opposite ends of the cell, pulled by the spindle fibers. Metaphase is the stage where chromosomes align at the cell's equator before they separate in anaphase.
Chromosomes move towards the middle during metaphase of mitosis. This is when the spindle fibers align the chromosomes along the equator of the cell.
During metaphase, chromosomes align in the middle of the cell and attach to the spindle fibers. This alignment ensures that each daughter cell will receive the correct number of chromosomes during cell division.
Chromosomes unduplicate during the anaphase stage of mitosis. This is when the sister chromatids separate and move towards opposite poles of the cell, ensuring that each daughter cell receives a complete set of unduplicated chromosomes.
Metaphase
The phase of mitosis during which chromosomes move to the middle of the cell is called the metaphase. In metaphase, the chromosomes align along the metaphase plate, forming the spindle apparatus. This alignment ensures that each daughter cell receives the correct number of chromosomes during cell division.
The Chromosomes separate from each other and move to opposite ends of the cell.
Anaphase is the stage of cell division where sister chromatids separate and move towards opposite ends of the cell, pulled by the spindle fibers. Metaphase is the stage where chromosomes align at the cell's equator before they separate in anaphase.
asters♥katherinebby' novanet answer
The cell's spindles attach to the chromosames, when their in the middle, and move the chromosomes to the poles of the cell
prophase, when the nucleus gets really big metaphase, where the chromosomes move to the middle anaphase, where the chromosomes move to opposite sides
Chromosomes line up in the middle of the cell during the metaphase stage of cell division. The plane in which the chromosomes are lined up is called the metaphasic plane.During anaphase, the chromosomes move into the two daughter cells toward the centrioles located at the poles of the daughter cells.sorry that's not one of the answers to me knowledge im thinking it would be asters they move in the opposite directions chromosome numbers are the same afterwards.NucleiAstersChromosomesSpindle fibers
the stage of meiotic or mitiotic cell divison in which the chromosomes move away from one another to opposite poles of the spindle