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difference between mitosis and meiosis ​

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Answered by alien19
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Mitosis versus meiosis. Cells divide and reproduce in two ways, mitosis and meiosis. Mitosis results in two identical daughter cells, whereas meiosis results in four sex cells. Below we highlight the keys differences and similarities between the two types of cell division.

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Mitosis versus meiosis

Cells divide and reproduce in two ways, mitosis and meiosis. Mitosis results in two identical daughter cells, whereas meiosis results in four sex cells. Below we highlight the keys differences and similarities between the two types of cell division.

Differences

Mitosis

Involves one cell division?

Results in two daughter cells

Results in diploid? daughter cells? (chromosome? number remains the same as parent cell)

Daughter cells are genetically identical

Occurs in all organisms except viruses

Creates all body cells (somatic?) apart from the germ cells? (eggs and sperm)

Prophase is much shorter

No recombination/crossing over occurs in prophase.

In metaphase individual chromosomes (pairs of chromatids) line up along the equator.

During anaphase the sister chromatids are separated to opposite poles.

Meiosis

Involves two successive cell divisions

Results in four daughter cells

Results in haploid? daughter cells (chromosome number is halved from the parent cell)

Daughter cells are genetically different

Occurs only in animals, plants and fungi

Creates germ cells (eggs and sperm) only

Prophase I takes much longer

Involves recombination/crossing over of chromosomes in prophase I

In metaphase I pairs of chromosomes line up along the equator.

During anaphase I the sister chromatids move together to the same pole.

During anaphase II the sister chromatids are separated to opposite poles.

Similarities

Mitosis

Diploid parent cell

Consists of interphase, prophase, metaphase, anaphase and telophase

In metaphase individual chromosomes (pairs of chromatids) line up along the equator.

During anaphase the sister chromatids are separated to opposite poles.

Ends with cytokinesis.

Meiosis

Diploid parent cell

Consists of interphase, prophase, metaphase, anaphase and telophase (but twice!)

In metaphase II individual chromosomes (pairs of chromatids) line up along the equator.

During anaphase II the sister chromatids are separated to opposite poles.

Ends with cytokinesis.

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