To create new cells and enable growth through regular cycles of division.
Special cells produced for sexual reproduction.
Mitosis (cell division) and interphase (cell growth and function).
Cells grow, obtain energy, and produce new proteins.
The full genome of the organism is replicated.
Further growth and preparation for cell division, including organelle and protein production.
The phase where mitosis and cytokinesis occur, resulting in the division of the cell.
A resting phase where some cells stop dividing and just maintain their functions.
Regulatory points that ensure a cell is ready to proceed to the next phase.
DNA is replicated to ensure each daughter cell receives an identical copy.
A double-stranded DNA molecule that contains coding and noncoding DNA.
46 chromosomes, inherited from both biological parents.
Pairs of chromosomes that are similar but not identical, containing different alleles.
Hydrogen bonds that form between adenine and thymine or cytosine and guanine.
The area where the DNA strands separate during replication.
Each new DNA molecule consits of one original strand and one newly synthesized strand.
To build complementary strands of DNA using one strand as a template.
Identical copies of a chromosome that are joined at the centromere.
They are separated and distributed into daughter cells.
Approximately 1 in 100,000, with proofreading reducing it to about 1 in 10 billion.
The hierarchical organization of DNA wrapped around histone proteins.
It is the region where sister chromatids are attached and later separated during cell division.
To help organize DNA into a compact, structured form called chromatin.
To produce two identical daughter cells from one parent cell.
New organelles are produced to prepare for cell division.
The process of cytoplasm division that follows mitosis.
It is essential for growth, development, and tissue repair.
The centromere is the region of a chromosome where it can attach to its sister chromatid and is where they attach after replication.
Mitosis produces two identical daughter cells from a single parent cell.
There are five stages in mitosis: prophase, prometaphase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase.
During prophase, DNA condenses to form chromosomes, and the centrosomes move away from each other.
The metaphase plate is the imaginary line where pairs of sister chromatids align at the center of the cell during metaphase.
During anaphase, the kinetochores pull the sister chromatids apart towards opposite centrosomes.
Cytokinesis is the process where the cytoplasm divides to form two separate daughter cells after mitosis.
Diploid cells have two sets of chromosomes (2n), while haploid cells have one set of chromosomes (n).
Meiosis is responsible for producing haploid gametes from diploid germ cells.
A tetrad is a group of four chromatids formed by the synapsis of homologous chromosomes during prophase 1.
Crossing-over is the exchange of genetic material between homologous chromosomes at chiasmata during meiosis.
Gametes are haploid cells that combine during sexual reproduction to form a zygote.
During telophase, chromosomes reach the centrosomes, and a nuclear envelope begins to form around each set of chromosomes.
The kinetochore is a protein that holds the centromere onto the cell's microtubules during cell division.
Meiosis results in four genetically diverse haploid cells from one diploid cell.
Nonkinetochore microtubules are microtubules that do not attach to kinetochores and help elongate the cell during mitosis.
The contractile ring helps to form the cleavage furrow that divides the cell into two daughter cells.
The cleavage furrow is the indentation that begins the process of cytokinesis in animal cells.
Somatic cells are diploid and make up most of the body's tissues, while gametes are haploid and involved in reproduction.
Fertilization results in the formation of a zygote, which is a diploid cell formed from the fusion of two haploid gametes.
During late prophase, the nuclear membrane disappears and kinetochores attach chromosomes to spindle fibers.
The cell prepares for mitosis during the G2 phase of interphase by duplicating its DNA and organelles.
The synaptonemal complex helps bind homologous chromosoes tightly together during prophase 1 of meiosis.
The nuclear envelope breaks down during prophase and re-forms during telophase.
Crossing-over.
Chiasmata.
They separate from each other (disjunction).
Haploid cells with 23 chromosomes.
Four haploid daughter cells containing unduplicated chromosomes.
Two divisions.
Mitosis produces two diploid cells, while meiosis produces four haploid cells.
The formation of gametes.
One gamete (egg) and three polar bodies.
At puberty.
During fetal development.
The failure of homologous chromosomes or sister chromatids to separate properly during cell division.
A condition where there is an abnormal number of chromosomes in cell.
A visual representation of an individual's chromosomes arranged side-by-side.
It increases genetic variability among gametes.
2n = 6.
They do not fully develop and are destroyed.
To produce gametes and reduce the number of chromosomes by half.
It stops at Metaphase 2 until fertilization.
Each human can produce 2^23 different gametes.
Synapsis of homologous chromosomes and crossing over.
Mitosis produces genetically identical cells, while meiosis produces genetically diverse cells.
It reduces the chromosome number by half.
It indicates the division of the cytoplasm during telophase and cytokinesis.
They separate and move toward opposite poles.
To help segregate chromosomes during cell division.
