Biology, asked by rishi102684, 10 months ago

explain karyokinesis.....​

Answers

Answered by DeveshNayak
3

Answer:

During cell division, the process of partition of a cell's nucleus into the daughter cells.

Explanation:

Hope it helps you

Brainlist please please

Answered by singhalseema03p9uwqn
0

Mitosis is the tightly regulated process of cell division that includes both nuclear division (karyokinesis) and the division of cytoplasm to two daughter cells (cytokinesis). This process can be divided into distinct phases including prophase, prometaphase, metaphase, anaphase, telophase, and finally, cytokinesis. The products of mitosis are two daughter cells that have identical DNA content that is also identical to the DNA content of the original parental cell. Depending on the nature of the parental cell, the daughters may be essentially identical in phenotype, or they may differ. In the case of undifferentiated adult stem cells or progenitor cells, one daughter may remain undifferentiated (self-renewing), whereas the other becomes committed to a differentiated lineage.

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