Biology, asked by hansavaghela90, 10 months ago

some point about yeast budding yeast​

Answers

Answered by bharati179
1

Explanation:

Yeast typically grow asexually by budding. A small bud which will become the daughter cell is formed on the parent (mother) cell, and enlarges with continued grow. As the daughter cell grows, the mother cell duplicates and then segregates its DNA. The nucleus divides and migrates into the daughter cell.

Answered by ankit281020048856
3

Answer:

Budding is a form of asexual reproduction usually observed in yeast.

• During this process, a small protrusion appears on the upper portion of the body of the organism. This bulge is called a bud. • The bud gradually grows in size and forms an individual cell. • From this newly budded cell, another bud appears at the tip. • This process continues and a chain of yeast cells is obtained.

Explanation:

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