No, the nucleus in a cell is what controls cell division.
The original and duplicated chromosomes attach to the cell membrane or the plasma membrane before the cell divides in half during binary fission in prokaryotes. This ensures that each daughter cell receives a complete set of chromosomes.
The chromosomes have to split and go to opposite sides of the cell.
the DNA will divide
Cell division is a process by which a parent cell divides into two or more daughter cells. It involves stages such as interphase, during which the cell prepares for division, and mitosis, where the nucleus divides, followed by cytokinesis, where the cytoplasm divides. This process is essential for growth, development, and repair in multicellular organisms.
What happens inside a cell membrane is pretty much everything that happens in a normal cell. The cell membrane is really a bilipid layer that forms the cells outer surface, essential for the cell's metabolism. Inside it contains many things- like the nucleus, vacules, etc.the cell membrane is usually the cells environment.
Cytokinesis.
Your DNA is copied into the new cell every time it divides
nothing
The original and duplicated chromosomes attach to the cell membrane or the plasma membrane before the cell divides in half during binary fission in prokaryotes. This ensures that each daughter cell receives a complete set of chromosomes.
The cell leaks cytoplasm.
Usually, the membrane will burst and let its contents out into the cell membrane and get used up.
It divides
it triples in number
Cytokinesis is the stage where the cell membrane pinches together and the cytoplasm divides, resulting in two daughter cells. This process follows cell division or mitosis and ensures that each daughter cell receives a complete set of organelles and genetic material.
Yes. Mitosis starts off as a single cell then the cell membrane disinegrates, the DNA divides and the cell membrane grows back on. And it eventually doubles and it repeats the process over and over.
Melios
it has a clone