Biology, asked by anishaborah31, 8 months ago

Interphase is not a resting phase. Explain​

Answers

Answered by dhritis567
7

So yes interphase is not actually a resting phase because at this time the cell is undergoing heavy metabolic activities..... synthesising all that is required for the mitotic phase .....so u can call this a misnomer.....

But with respect to cell division this has been called the resting phase.(...otherwise all the activities are taking place inside the cell)

Answered by hyacinth98
0

In microorganisms, the cell cycle is broken into various stages, not called interphase, but containing large numbers of similar advances, including DNA replication. The two divisions of meiosis are likewise isolated by unique interphase, known as interkinesis in which the DNA doesn't duplicate. This prompts a cell division that diminishes how much DNA is in every cell.

Interphase

  • Interphase is the period of the cell cycle in which a common cell consumes the vast majority of its time on earth. During this stage, the phone duplicates its DNA in anticipation of mitosis. Interphase is the 'day-to-day living' or metabolic period of the cell, where the cell gets supplements and processes them, develops, peruses its DNA, and behaviours other "typical" cell capabilities.
  • Most eukaryotic cells invest the vast majority of their energy in interphase. This stage was previously called the resting stage. Nonetheless, the interphase doesn't depict a phone that is only resting; rather, the phone is living and planning for later cell division, so the name was changed.
  • A typical misguided judgment is that the interphase is the main phase of mitosis. In any case, since mitosis is the division of the core, the prophase is really the primary stage. In interphase, the cell prepares itself for mitosis or meiosis.
  • Logical in light of the fact that the phone isn't really resting - cyclins are being actuated and deactivated, new cell materials are being made, and the genome is being copied, albeit the super phenotypical contrasts happen during meiosis/mitosis.

(#SPJ2)

Similar questions