Question

Why do you think the daughter cell from a mitosis division is a faithful replica or copy of the parent cell?
Exchange of DNA materials takes place and hence the daughter cell is a copy of the parent cell.
Exchange of DNA materials do not take place and hence the daughter cell is a copy of the parent cell.
Pairing of homologous chromosomes takes place and hence the daughter cell is a copy of the parent cell.
Mitosis happens in both somatic and sex cells and therefore the daughter cell is a copy of the parent cell.
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Answers

GPT-4o mini
The correct explanation for why the daughter cell from a mitosis division is a faithful replica of the parent cell is:

**"Exchange of DNA materials do not take place and hence the daughter cell is a copy of the parent cell."**

In mitosis, the process involves the replication of the cell's chromosomes so that each daughter cell receives an identical set of chromosomes as the parent cell. Unlike meiosis, which involves exchange of genetic material (crossing over) between homologous chromosomes, mitosis maintains the same genetic information without any exchange. Therefore, each daughter cell is a clone of the parent cell, possessing the same genetic material.