I don't know... Let me know of u find out!
True
Interphase
Daughter Chromosomes
Chromosomes duplicate during the S phase of interphase in the cell cycle. This is when DNA replication occurs, resulting in each chromosome being duplicated to form two sister chromatids held together at the centromere.
DNA is replicated during interphase, and chromosomes form or condense during the prophase. So the genes and chromosomes are duplicated at the beginning of mitosis, during the interphase, although you can't see them as chromosomes until the prophase, before the cell splits.
When a cell duplicates, both the DNA and the chromosomes duplicate.
True
True
Interphase
Daughter Chromosomes
Chromosomes duplicate during the S phase of interphase in the cell cycle. This is when DNA replication occurs, resulting in each chromosome being duplicated to form two sister chromatids held together at the centromere.
When you duplicate your 46 chromosomes, you will have 92 chromatids.
DNA is replicated during interphase, and chromosomes form or condense during the prophase. So the genes and chromosomes are duplicated at the beginning of mitosis, during the interphase, although you can't see them as chromosomes until the prophase, before the cell splits.
The chromosomes duplicate itself during interphase
During meiosis, chromosomes duplicate through a process called DNA replication. This involves the separation of the two strands of the DNA molecule and the synthesis of new complementary strands. This results in two identical copies of each chromosome, known as sister chromatids, which are then separated during cell division.
Yes, chromosomes duplicate during interphase in the cell cycle.
Chromosomes duplicate during the S phase of the cell cycle, which occurs after DNA is replicated and before cell division (mitosis or meiosis). This ensures that each daughter cell receives a complete set of chromosomes with identical genetic material.