ertyu
The two chromatid arms on a chromosome are known as sister chromatids, which are genetically identical copies created during DNA replication. Sister chromatids are joined at the centromere and are separated during cell division.
A duplicated chromosome consists of two identical sister chromatids joined at the centromere. Therefore, one half of a duplicated chromosome refers to one of these sister chromatids, which contains a copy of the genetic material from the original chromosome.
A chromosome pair, as in a pair of Chromosome 15, or a pair of Chromosome 5. Others have said Tetrad - Pls stand-by.
Normal chromosome replication results in two identical copies of the original chromosome, each with one chromatid. This process ensures that each daughter cell receives a complete set of chromosomes during cell division.
In late anaphase and G1 of interphase, a chromosome is unreplicated and consists of a single DNA double helix. A replicated chromosome contains two identical DNA double helices.
chromatid
The two chromatid arms on a chromosome are known as sister chromatids, which are genetically identical copies created during DNA replication. Sister chromatids are joined at the centromere and are separated during cell division.
Somatic cell chromosome is made of two identical chromatids
The two identical strands of a chromosome are called chromatids. DNA replication occurs in the interphase stage of the cell cycle.
A chromosome consists of two identical sister chromatids during the S phase of the cell cycle when DNA replication occurs. This ensures that each daughter cell receives an identical copy of the genetic material during cell division.
if you are a male you have an x and a y chromosome in your twenty third chromosome, thus making them different
chromatids.
Well in eukaryotic cells each chromosome has a telomere on each end (to prevent it from unraveling), but I'm not 100% certain that these telomeres are identical although they contain very long repetitions of the same nucleotides. But in bacteria the chromosome is ring shaped and is all genes (there are no noncoding sequences, e.g. centromeres, telomeres, introns, pseudogenes, transposons) so there are no identical parts.
A duplicated chromosome consists of two identical sister chromatids joined at the centromere. Therefore, one half of a duplicated chromosome refers to one of these sister chromatids, which contains a copy of the genetic material from the original chromosome.
Before cell division begins, each chromosome consists of two identical joined chromatids called sister chromatids. Each sister chromatid contains an identical copy of the chromosome's DNA molecule.
chromatid is a individal strand in a chromosome.....
A chromosome pair, as in a pair of Chromosome 15, or a pair of Chromosome 5. Others have said Tetrad - Pls stand-by.