Brain cells
There are two ways for cells to divide and produce more cells. One is through the process of mitosis and the other is through budding. Budding produces a smaller cell off of the larger cell.
Labile cells (the kinds of cells that can divide throughout their lifetime) normally do so within the organ they constitute. Some examples of labile cells are skin cells, cells of the gastrointestinal tract, and blood cells; however, blood cells divide in the bone marrow and lymphocytes divide in the lymph nodes. Other kinds of cells in the body are either stable cells (that do not normally divide--this includes nerve cells) and permanent cells (that do not have the ability to divide.)
Haploid cellsGenetically different daughter cells.At the end of mitosis the cell is called CytokinesisGametes are produced at the end of meiosis
plant cells
Mitosis, meiosis, budding, fission, vegetative division.
mitosis creates two diploid somatic cells
Somatic (body) cells. Diploid (have all 46 chromosomes)
Gamates are know as the sperm and egg or "sex cells". These cells are the only cells in the body that undergo meiosis, not mitosis.
Mitosis is the type of cell division which takes place during growth, repair and asexual reproduction. So the types of cells produced are normal body cells eg skin, brain, muscle, bone, liver etc, in other words they are not reproductive cells. Cells produced by mitosis are exact copies of the parent cell: they have the same number of chromosomes and the same genes. Reproductive cells (eggs and sperm) are produced by the alternative type of cell division called meiosis.
mitosis and merosis
mitosis and meiosis
There are two ways for cells to divide and produce more cells. One is through the process of mitosis and the other is through budding. Budding produces a smaller cell off of the larger cell.
Labile cells (the kinds of cells that can divide throughout their lifetime) normally do so within the organ they constitute. Some examples of labile cells are skin cells, cells of the gastrointestinal tract, and blood cells; however, blood cells divide in the bone marrow and lymphocytes divide in the lymph nodes. Other kinds of cells in the body are either stable cells (that do not normally divide--this includes nerve cells) and permanent cells (that do not have the ability to divide.)
Haploid cellsGenetically different daughter cells.At the end of mitosis the cell is called CytokinesisGametes are produced at the end of meiosis
Plant Cells
plant cells
Humans have trillion of cell in number. Answer: The kinds of cells are: 1. nerve cells 2 muscle cells(many kinds-cardiac,smooth,straited etc) 3. epithelial cells 4. blood cells 5. bone cells