Well this question is hard. A cell that goes through mitosis would be cells like skin cells, and any other somatic cell. You can also be asking of any practical applications of mitosis. Healing is an example of mitosis, growing is an example of mitosis, even cancer is an example of mitosis.
Most cells in the body are capable of undergoing mitosis, with exceptions such as mature red blood cells and certain brain cells that are terminally differentiated and do not divide. Skin cells, gut cells, and immune cells are examples of cells that regularly undergo mitosis for growth, repair, and maintenance of tissues.
Nerve cells (neurons) and muscle cells (myocytes) stop undergoing mitosis after birth. Once fully developed, these cells mostly remain in a post-mitotic state, meaning they do not divide further.
they divide and grow by undergoing a process called as mitosis
To develop a procedure to identify cancerous tissue based on the number of cells undergoing mitosis, you could obtain a tissue sample, stain it to highlight mitotic cells, and then count the number of cells undergoing mitosis per unit area using a microscope. An increased number of cells undergoing mitosis may indicate abnormal cell proliferation characteristic of cancer. Further validation through histological analysis and comparison with healthy tissue samples would be necessary to confirm the presence of cancer.
Skin cells undergo mitosis to replace old or damaged cells, maintain the overall integrity of the skin, and facilitate wound healing. Additionally, mitosis helps in the growth and development of the skin during periods of growth.
All cells are undergoing mitosis continuously to replace, cells that are dying continuously.
All cells are undergoing mitosis continuously to replace, cells that are dying continuously.
Brain cells
The cells in the corpus layer region undergo rapid mitosis
A single cell undergoing mitosis typically produces two daughter cells.
These are called permeant cells. Examples are adult neurons, striated muscles, cardiac muscle, RBCs and cells of lens in the eye.
Somatic cells would be the general term describing the type of cells undergoing mitosis in a human. These are the any cells in the body that are not specialized for reproduction and undergo mitosis for growth, repair, and maintenance.
Brain cells
Most cells in the body are capable of undergoing mitosis, with exceptions such as mature red blood cells and certain brain cells that are terminally differentiated and do not divide. Skin cells, gut cells, and immune cells are examples of cells that regularly undergo mitosis for growth, repair, and maintenance of tissues.
Mitosis is a process of cell division that results in two genetically identical daughter cells. Therefore, one cell undergoing mitosis produces two daughter cells.
The very top layer of the dermis is always undergoing mitosis as the top layer (epidermis) is being lost all the time.
Nerve cells (neurons) and muscle cells (myocytes) stop undergoing mitosis after birth. Once fully developed, these cells mostly remain in a post-mitotic state, meaning they do not divide further.