Asked by Anonymous
How do the daughter cells at the end of mitosis and cytokinesis compare with their parent cell when it was at the end of G2 of the cell cycle?
a. The daughter cells have half the numbers of chromosomes and half the amount of DNA.
b. The daughter cells have the same numbers of chromosomes and twice the amount of DNA.
c. The daughter cells have the same numbers of chromosomes and the same amount of DNA.
d. The daughter cells have the same numbers of chromosomes and half the amount of DNA.
a. The daughter cells have half the numbers of chromosomes and half the amount of DNA.
b. The daughter cells have the same numbers of chromosomes and twice the amount of DNA.
c. The daughter cells have the same numbers of chromosomes and the same amount of DNA.
d. The daughter cells have the same numbers of chromosomes and half the amount of DNA.
Answers
Answered by
BioNerd
C because mitosis produces daughter cells that have the same amount of DNA and chromosomes as the parent cell (thus the replication process)
There are no AI answers yet. The ability to request AI answers is coming soon!
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.