It would take cell divisions for one original cell to produce
seven (7)
Daughter cells produced by mitosis are genetically identical to the original cell, as they inherit the same number and type of chromosomes. They are also similar in size and function to the original cell.
A cell undergoes two rounds of division during meiosis, resulting in a total of two divisions. This process helps to produce four daughter cells with half the number of chromosomes of the original cell.
After 7 successive mitotic divisions, each cell will have undergone 8 rounds of division (the original division plus the 7 additional divisions). This means the number of cells will be 2^8, which is 256 cells.
the cell would not produce enough energy
seven (7)
5
Starting with a zygote, a series of five cell divisions would produce an early embryo with 32 cells. Each division doubles the number of cells, so the progression would be 1 -> 2 -> 4 -> 8 -> 16 -> 32 cells.
500 cell divisions. Why? Because 500x2=1000. You also could have found the answer by just doing 1000 divided by 2. Which equals obviously 500.
A single primary cell produces 4 gametes during meiosis. This occurs after two rounds of cell division, resulting in four daughter cells, each with half the number of chromosomes as the original cell.
Eight mitotic divisions are required for a single cell to produce 256 cells, as each division doubles the number of cells. Starting with one cell, the first division produces 2 cells, the second division produces 4 cells, and so on until 256 cells are reached after 8 divisions.
If glycolysis could not happen in a cell, the cell would not produce ATP molecules.
Oh, dude, like, each sex cell goes through this thing called meiosis, where it divides twice. So, technically, there are two divisions that happen to create each sex cell. It's like the cell's way of saying, "I need some space, man."
Daughter cells produced by mitosis are genetically identical to the original cell, as they inherit the same number and type of chromosomes. They are also similar in size and function to the original cell.
A cell undergoes two rounds of division during meiosis, resulting in a total of two divisions. This process helps to produce four daughter cells with half the number of chromosomes of the original cell.
After 7 successive mitotic divisions, each cell will have undergone 8 rounds of division (the original division plus the 7 additional divisions). This means the number of cells will be 2^8, which is 256 cells.
Even if there was that kind of sex cell, I don't think it would survive! Sex cells ALWAYS have 46 chromosomes. At the end of meiosis, as long as there are no mistakes, each sperm or egg cell would have 23 chromosomes.