Biology, asked by tanishqawalke11, 1 month ago

What is prophase, Metaphase, Ana phase, telophase...​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

The second phase of mitosis is metaphase, in which the chromosomes move into the equatorial plane of the spindle. As the third phase—anaphase—begins, the chromatids separate and move to opposite ends of the cell. Once the chromatids separate, they are called chromosomes. ... In the last phase—telophase—the cell divides.

Answered by yashnikam1405
4

prophase → In the first phase prophase a centriole, located outside the nucleus, divides. The long, threadlike material of the nucleus coils up into visible chromosomes, and the nuclear membrane disappears.

Metaphase → The second phase of mitosis is metaphase, in which the chromosomes move into the equatorial plane of the spindle.

Anaphase → the chromatids separate and move to opposite ends of the cell. Once the chromatids separate, they are called chromosomes. In this way a complete set of chromosomes migrates toward each centriole.

Telophase → The changes now taking place are the reverse of those that occurred during prophase: the chromosomes uncoil, new membranes form around the nuclei, and the fibers of the spindle disappear.

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