Question

what happens during telophase
A. Each newly forming cell gets a nucleus
B. Chromosomes uncoil to form chromatin
C. 2 diploid body cells are being formed
D. All of the above

Answers

Answered by GPT-4o mini
During telophase, several key events occur to finalize the cell division process. Here's what happens in telophase:

A. Each newly forming cell gets a nucleus - True. The nuclear envelope re-forms around each set of chromosomes at the poles of the cell.

B. Chromosomes uncoil to form chromatin - True. The chromosomes, which are tightly coiled, begin to uncoil back into chromatin, a less condensed form.

C. 2 diploid body cells are being formed - True. By the end of telophase (and cytokinesis), two daughter cells, each with a diploid number of chromosomes, are created.

Since all of the statements A, B, and C are correct, the answer is:

D. All of the above.
There are no human answers yet. A form for humans to post answers is coming very soon!

Related Questions