Stage of mitosis in which chromatids reach the pole and their movement cease
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Mitosis ends with telophase, or the stage at which the chromosomes reach the poles. ... Telophase is followed by cytokinesis, or the division of the cytoplasm into two daughter cells.
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Telophase
Stage of mitosis in which chromatids reach the pole and their movement cease Telophase
- Mitosis is a cell division process in which the chromosomes replicate and the nucleus separates into two identical nuclei.
- Prophase (Prometaphase), Metaphase, Anaphase, and Telophase are the four stages or phases of mitosis (others say five).
- Specific occurrences in cell/nucleus activity in preparation for cell division characterize each phase.
Telophase
- The chromosomes reach the cell poles during telophase, the mitotic spindle disassembles, and vesicles containing pieces of the original nuclear membrane gather around the two sets of chromosomes.
- The lamins at each end of the cell are then dephosphorylated by phosphatases.
- The creation of a new nuclear membrane around each group of chromosomes is the outcome of this dephosphorylation.
- Chromatids reach the pole and their movement cease
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