Normal cell activities occur not in mitosis, but in a cell cycle in a general. This part of cell cycle is called interphase. Mitosis starts when the cell starts dividing, not when a cell is carrying out normal function.
Mitosis begins during the M phase of the cell cycle, which is also known as the mitotic phase. This phase includes mitosis, where the nucleus divides, and cytokinesis, where the cytoplasm divides, resulting in two daughter cells.
No, but mitosis is a part [the M-phase] of the Cell cycle.
Mitosis occurs in the M phase of the cell cycle, which follows the G2 phase and precedes the G1 phase of the next cycle. Before mitosis, the cell is in the interphase stage, where it grows and replicates its DNA during the G1, S, and G2 phases. After mitosis, the cell enters the G1 phase, where it prepares for another round of the cell cycle.
Mitosis
How
The phase in the cell cycle when the cell is not going through mitosis is called interphase.
Mitosis begins during the M phase of the cell cycle, which is also known as the mitotic phase. This phase includes mitosis, where the nucleus divides, and cytokinesis, where the cytoplasm divides, resulting in two daughter cells.
No, but mitosis is a part [the M-phase] of the Cell cycle.
Mitosis
Mitosis
Mitosis
Mitosis
Mitosis and cytokinesis occur during the M phase (mitotic phase) of the cell cycle. This phase is characterized by cell division, where the cell replicates its DNA and divides into two daughter cells.
How
The shortest stage of the cell cycle is m-phase.
No, interphase is not part of mitosis. Interphase is the phase in the cell cycle where the cell grows, replicates its DNA, and prepares for cell division. Mitosis is a separate phase of the cell cycle where the cell's nucleus divides into two daughter nuclei.
Mitosis occurs during the cell cycle in the M phase. This phase follows the G2 phase and is essential for cell division and reproduction. During mitosis, the cell nucleus divides into two identical daughter nuclei.