What is the difference between mitosis and meiosis
Answers
Answered by
2
There are two major differences between mitosis and meiosis.
First, meiosis involves not one, but two cell divisions.
Second, meiosis leads to the production of germ cells, which are cells that give rise to gametes.
Germ cells are different from somatic cells in a critical way.
First, meiosis involves not one, but two cell divisions.
Second, meiosis leads to the production of germ cells, which are cells that give rise to gametes.
Germ cells are different from somatic cells in a critical way.
Answered by
1
Both mitosis and meiosis are associated with cytokinesis. The end result of both are daughter cells produced from a parent cell. The fundamental sequence of events in mitosis is the same as in meiosis (in meiosis it happens twice). Both processes include the breakdown of the nuclear membrane, the separation of genetic material into two groups, followed by cell division and the reformation of the nuclear membrane in each cells. The processes differ in two fundamental. Meiosis has two rounds of genetic separation and cellular division while mitosis only has one of each. In meiosis homologous chromosomes separate leading to daughter cells that are not genetically identical. In mitosis the daughter cells are identical to the parent as well as to each other.
Hope it helps
Hope it helps
zainab22:
plyz mark as brainliest answer
Similar questions