The cycle restarts.
The cell cycle starts at Interphase where the cell works and grows. It stays in interphase for 90% of the total time of the cell cycle. The end of the cell cycle is Mitosis and Cytokinesis. Mitosis is the process that divides the nuclear material. Cytokinesis is the process that divides the cytoplasm and the rest of the organelles in half.Hope i helped.
At the end of the lysogenic cycle, the host cell typically remains intact and viable. The viral DNA is integrated into the host's genome as a prophage, allowing it to replicate along with the host's DNA during cell division. This can lead to the production of new viral particles later if the virus enters the lytic cycle, causing eventual cell lysis. However, during the lysogenic phase, the host cell continues to grow and divide without immediate harm.
In a human cell it would be 23 pairs.
cell cycle
All life would end
the host cell becomes a virus
the host cell bursts and dies
During the lytic cycle, the host cell eventually bursts open (lysis), releasing newly formed viruses to infect other cells. This results in the death of the host cell.
one, then it makes two, then those two make more, and so on.
When the cell is formed
The last step in the lytic cycle is that new viruses begin to be made
No, it just repeats.
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The cell cycle starts at Interphase where the cell works and grows. It stays in interphase for 90% of the total time of the cell cycle. The end of the cell cycle is Mitosis and Cytokinesis. Mitosis is the process that divides the nuclear material. Cytokinesis is the process that divides the cytoplasm and the rest of the organelles in half.Hope i helped.
At the end of the lysogenic cycle, the host cell typically remains intact and viable. The viral DNA is integrated into the host's genome as a prophage, allowing it to replicate along with the host's DNA during cell division. This can lead to the production of new viral particles later if the virus enters the lytic cycle, causing eventual cell lysis. However, during the lysogenic phase, the host cell continues to grow and divide without immediate harm.
Once a cell is dead, it cannot be recharged as it has reached the end of its useful life cycle. The best course of action is to dispose of the dead cell properly and replace it with a new one. Trying to recharge a dead cell can be ineffective and potentially dangerous.
In a human cell it would be 23 pairs.