it will be starting to multiply and all the organelles will be acting differently
Interphase then Mitosis then Cytokinesis then Mitosis the Cytokinesis That's what I remember. Mitosis will occur twice; the reason why there 4 daughter cells (gametes) and they are haploid.
Acetocarmine stain is used in mitosis practicals to help visualize and study chromosome structure and behavior during cell division. It helps to stain chromosomes so they can be more easily seen under a microscope, aiding in the identification of different stages of mitosis.
Meiosis I better mirrors the mitosis process because during this stage the homologous chromosomes separate, similar to the way sister chromatids separate during mitosis. Meiosis II, on the other hand, involves separating sister chromatids, which is not seen in mitosis.
Mitosis was first discovered and meiosis evolved out of mitosis. Mitosis stands for the first division of a cell into two genetic identically cells. Meiosis stands for two divisions into four genetic different cells.
The first phase in mitosis is prophase, during which the chromosomes condense, the nuclear envelope breaks down, and the mitotic spindle fibers begin to form.
The chromatids can first be seen under a light microscope during the metaphase stage of mitosis, when they line up along the cell's equator.
double chromosomes first become visible in which step of mitosis?
Yes, as they are at their most condensed going through mitosis. Seen with a microscope, that is!
They first become visible during prophase of mitosis.
in mitosis the nucleus first and then the cytoplasm
mitosis
in mitosis, the nucleus divides first, and then the cytoplasm.
During cell division (Mitosis, Miosis)
Mitosis occurs first in the cell cycle before meiosis.
The first person to discover and study mitosis was Walther Flemming in 1870.
Anaphase
yes, of course