It's possible, that a cell can get sick and not know when to stop growing. If it doesn't know when to stop growing, then it will continue to make more cells uncontrollably. Eventually, it starts to form into cancer. That's actually how people get cancer. Since the cell doesn't know to stop producing, it ends up spreading cancer. That's why if you go to the doctor soon after you get cancer, they can stop it. They just kill those sick cells.
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.
DNA COPYING , k .
Proteins called internal regulators and external regulators control the cell cycle. Internal regulatory proteins allow the cell cycle to proceed only when certain events have occurred in the cell itself. External regulatory proteins direct cells to speed up or slow down the cell cycle.
DNA replication occurs during interphase.
During the G1 phase of the cell cycle, the cell grows and carries out its normal functions. This is followed by the S phase, during which DNA synthesis and replication occur. Finally, the G2 phase takes place, where the cell prepares for mitosis.
TCA cycle occur in the mitochondria (the power house of the cell)
All of it.The cell cycle describes the state of the DNA in the cell.
Mitochondria
Cancer is a result of a malfunctioning cell cycle.
Mitosis
No, interphase is part of the cell cycle and so is cell division. They occur at differenttimes in the cell cycle.
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle.
cancer
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.
DNA replication occurs during the S phase of the cell cycle.
Cytokinesis
No. Cell growth and DNA replication occur during interphase but do not occur during mitosis and cytokinesis.