Biology, asked by Anonymous, 1 year ago

Explain budding in yeast?

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Answered by myra95
11
Yeasts, like all fungi, may have asexual and sexual reproductive cycles. The most common mode of vegetative growth in yeast is asexualreproduction by budding. Here, a small bud(also known as a bleb), or daughter cell, is formed on the parent cell. ... Haploid cells may then reproduce asexually by mitosis.
Answered by rajasa
6

Asexual reproduction occurs by budding in yeast-a unicellular fungus.
Yeast cell produces two daughter nuclei by mitotic division,so as to reproduce by budding. This yeast is called as parent cell. A small bulge appreas on the surface of parent cell. This bulge us actually a bus. One of the two daughter nuclei enters this bud. After sufficient growth, bud separates from the parent cell and starts to live independently as a daughter yeast cell

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