Biology, asked by mansiraut143, 11 months ago

cell cycle is divided into which parts and explain them in detail​

Answers

Answered by abhilashsatheesh2802
1

Answer:

In eukaryotic cells, the cell cycle is divided into two major phases: interphase and mitosis (or the mitotic (M) phase).

Interphase is the longest part of the cell cycle. This is when the cell grows and copies its DNA before moving into mitosis. During mitosis, chromosomes will align, separate, and move into new daughter cells.

The prefix inter- means between, so interphase takes place between one mitotic (M) phase and the next.

Explanation:

Interphase consists of three steps

Answered by sinajismail0
0
The cell cycle. In eukaryotic cells, the cell cycle is divided into two major phases: interphase and mitosis (or the mitotic (M) phase). Interphase is the longest part of the cell cycle. This is when the cell grows and copies its DNA before moving into mitosis.
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