Asked by Alto saxaphone
Prophase
Metaphase
Anaphase
Telophase
DNA gets tight
DNA is at the ends
DNA pulls apart
DNA loosens up
which phase of mitosis goes with which action from the chromosomes at that stage
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Correct matches (with brief explanation):
- Prophase — DNA gets tight (chromatin condenses into visible chromosomes).
- Metaphase — (not in your list) chromosomes line up at the cell’s middle (the metaphase plate).
- Anaphase — DNA pulls apart (sister chromatids separate and move toward opposite poles).
- Telophase — DNA is at the ends and DNA loosens up (chromosomes reach the poles, nuclear envelopes reform, and chromosomes decondense).
If you need a strict one-to-one pairing for a quiz, use: Prophase = DNA gets tight; Metaphase = (chromosomes at the middle); Anaphase = DNA pulls apart; Telophase = DNA at the ends / DNA loosens up.
- Prophase — DNA gets tight (chromatin condenses into visible chromosomes).
- Metaphase — (not in your list) chromosomes line up at the cell’s middle (the metaphase plate).
- Anaphase — DNA pulls apart (sister chromatids separate and move toward opposite poles).
- Telophase — DNA is at the ends and DNA loosens up (chromosomes reach the poles, nuclear envelopes reform, and chromosomes decondense).
If you need a strict one-to-one pairing for a quiz, use: Prophase = DNA gets tight; Metaphase = (chromosomes at the middle); Anaphase = DNA pulls apart; Telophase = DNA at the ends / DNA loosens up.
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