cytokenisis
In animal cells, the cytoplasm divides by cytokinesis. This is when the cleavage furrow is made which pinches the large cell in the middle. This continues until it goes all the way through and two daughter cells are present.
There are two places that ribosomes usually exist in the cell: suspended in the cytosol and bound to theendoplasmic reticulum. These ribosomes are called free ribosomes and bound ribosomes respectively. In both cases, the ribosomes usually form aggregates called polysomes.
The cell membrane controls what goes in an out of the cell.
Four gametes are produced every time a cell goes through the process of meiosis. For females, the four become an egg(zygote).
the information of the enzymes are in the nucleus made in the cytoplasm so the messenger goes to the cytoplasm to make a new protien then it is sent to the blood so it can go where it is needed
The cytoplasm doesn't pinch in following telophase because it goes to cytoplasmic reticulum
In animal cells, the cytoplasm divides by cytokinesis. This is when the cleavage furrow is made which pinches the large cell in the middle. This continues until it goes all the way through and two daughter cells are present.
surrounds cell organelles/cytoplasm and controls what goes in and out of the cell
cytoplasm division occurs in animal cells when the cytoplasm cells have a cohesive reaction that overtakes the nucleas. When this happens the nucleas goes galactic and irritates the animal cell systems creating cytoplasm division which co-hers a distinctive change. Hope this helps :-) Professor Guilbert
waste material like poop goes in an dout of the cytoplasm!
Yes, but not during meiosis of an egg cell since all of the cytoplasm goes into one of the daughter cells.
There are two places that ribosomes usually exist in the cell: suspended in the cytosol and bound to theendoplasmic reticulum. These ribosomes are called free ribosomes and bound ribosomes respectively. In both cases, the ribosomes usually form aggregates called polysomes.
It goes through the cytoplasm
The cell wall prevents the cytoplasm to pinch in telophase of plant cells, instead a cell plate is formed by vesicles. The cell wall is rigid and strong enough not to allow the pinching
Plant cells and animal cells both contain a nucleus, which houses the cell's DNA. They also have mitochondria, responsible for generating energy in the cell. Additionally, both cell types have a cell membrane that regulates the passage of molecules in and out of the cell.
During cell division, the cell goes through a process called mitosis where the DNA is replicated and divided equally between the two daughter cells. The cell then undergoes cytokinesis, where the cytoplasm is divided, giving rise to two separate daughter cells with identical genetic material.
Here is a biology I level answer for cytokinesis. I'm pasting it from the library.thinkquest.org website:CytokinesisNow there are two separate nuclei, but they are in the same cell. The cell now needs to be split in half. Cytokenesis begins in anaphase and continues on through telophase. The first visible sign of cytokenesis is when the cell begins to pucker in, a process called furrowing. Furrowing tends to take place at right angles to the axis of the spindle (so that each nucleus is placed in a different cell of course!). The cytoskeleton is reused to build the next spindle for mitosis. Now the two cells will continue the cell cycle and begin their interphase again! For more specific and detailed information you will need to hear from a real biologist.