Biology, asked by avishkarc5537, 1 year ago

Cleavage is a unique form of mitotic cell division in which [CPMT 1999; JIPMER 2001]
A) The nucleus does not participate
B) There is no growth of cells
C) No spindle develops to guide the cells
D) The plasma membranes of daughter cells do not separate

Answers

Answered by Parush11
1
option B is right answer
Answered by writersparadise
0

The answer is Option B.

Cleavage is a unique form of mitotic cell division in which there is no growth of cells.

Cleavage represents a range of fast mitotic zygote divisions. These divisions transform a single cellular zygote into a multicellular structure. No cells grow in this structure.

The contractile ring gets tightened around the cytoplasm until it gets divided into daughter cells at the time of cellular cleavage.

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