MITOSIS

mītōˈsĭs, mĭ–, process of nuclear division in a living cell by which the carriers of hereditary information, or the chromosomes, are exactly replicated and the two copies distributed to identical daughter nuclei. Mitosis is almost always accompanied by cell division (cytokinesis), and the latter is sometimes considered a part of the mitotic process. The pattern of mitosis is fundamentally the same in all cells. However, while animal cells apparently divide by pinching into two separate cells, plant cells develop a cell plate, which becomes a cellulose cell wall between the two daughter cells. The importance of mitosis is the maintenance of the chromosomal set; each cell formed receives chromosomes that are alike in composition and equal in number to the chromosomes of the parent cell.

The Stages of Mitosis

Mitosis is simply described as having four stages—prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase; the steps follow one another without interruption. The entire four-stage division process averages about one hour in duration, and the period between cell divisions, called interphase or interkinesis, varies greatly but is considerably longer.

During interphase the chromosomes are dispersed in the nucleus and appear as a network of long, thin threads or filaments, called the chromatin. At some point before prophase begins, the chromosomes replicate themselves to form pairs of identical sister chromosomes, or chromatids; the deoxyribose nucleic acid (DNA) of the chromosomes is synthesized only during interphase, not while mitosis is in process.

During prophase the two chromatids remain attached to one another at a region called the centromere, but each contracts into a compact tightly coiled body; the nucleolus and, in most cases, the nuclear envelope break down and disappear. Also during prophase the spindle begins to form. In animal cells the centrioles separate and move apart, and radiating bundles of fibers, called asters, appear around them. Some sets of fiber run from one centriole to the other; these are the spindle fibers. In plant cells the spindle forms without centrioles.

During metaphase the chromosomes congregate at a plane midway between the two ends to which the spindle tapers. This is called the equatorial plane and marks the point where the whole cell will divide when nuclear division is completed; the ends of the spindle are the poles to which the chromatids will migrate. The chromatids are attached to the spindle fibers at the centromeres.

During anaphase the two chromatids of each chromosome separate and move to opposite poles, as if pulled along the spindle fibers by the centromeres. During telophase new nuclear envelopes form around the two groups of daughter chromosomes (as they are now called), the new nucleoli begin to appear, and eventually, as the formation of the two daughter nuclei is completed, the spindle fibers disappear. The chromosomes uncoil to assume their dispersed distribution within the interphased nucleus. Cytokinesis, which may begin before or after mitosis is completed, finally separates the daughter nuclei into two new individual daughter cells.

A considerable variance in the degree and timing of these stages exists across species, and cells can be classified by their mitotic characteristics. Despite the relative ease of observation of the physical stages of mitosis under the microscope (primarily because the chromosomes stain readily when in their coiled state), the exact chemical and kinetic nature of mitosis is not yet fully understood. For instance, the spindle has been determined to consist largely of thin, elongate tubules called microtubules, but their functions have yet to be understood.

Meiosis and Amitosis

Mitotic division is the method of nuclear division of the somatic (body) cells, as distinguished from the gametes, or sex cells (eggs and sperm). In sexual reproduction, i.e., by the union of two gametes, the complex process of meiosis takes place, which produces cells that each contain only half the normal number of chromosomes. Direct cell division, in which the nucleus simply cleaves in two (sometimes but not always followed by division of the cytoplasm), is called amitosis and is very rare.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Mitosis  - 506 results

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...information/ Cell Division-Binary Fission and Mitosis: www.emc.maricopa.edu/faculty...educational/2001/ cellcycle.html Mitosis Still Images Cell and Developmental Biology...2101abs/mitosisl.html Cell Division and Mitosis: http://clab.cecil.cc.md...
...through their bodies. CELL DIVISION: MITOSIS, MEIOSIS, AND BINARY FISSION Cclls come...divide hv one of two o hrc>c-csacs: mitosis (nuclcar div isicm), which is usuallv...raw material <>l c;<>iuti<>1i. Mitosis and the cell cycle Mitosis is the process...
CHEMICAL CHANGES DURING MITOSIS No doubt chemical changes do occur during mitosis, but these are not easy to study. The best chance...so that all of the eggs are in the same state of mitosis. Because of the importance of desoxypentosenucleic...
...amoeboid mechanism, like activation of mitosis, seems to occur in all types of cell...standard time, paralleled the amount of mitosis in these cells throughout the process...still abnormally great about 3 weeks after mitosis had returned to normal. In degenerating...
...this to a similarly reduced version of mitosis, which amounts to: ? Replicate the chromosomes...meiosis look an awful lot like the steps for mitosis. When we delve into the details, there...striking that meiosis II operates much like mitosis. One of the key points here is that there...
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journal articles on: Mitosis  - 447 results

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The Evolution of Meiosis from Mitosis by Adam S. Wilkins , Robin Holliday...meiosis almost certainly evolved from mitosis, it has not one but four novel steps...STEP IN THE EVOLUTION OF MEIOSIS FROM MITOSIS In the evolution of the eukaryotes, it...
...Condensin for Chromosome Condensation in Mitosis and Gene Expression in Interphase by Kimberley...CHROMOSOMES undergo dynamic behaviors during mitosis to enable the precise separation of the...identified for unique func- tions during mitosis, it is now clear that both complexes...
...Tubulin Folding on Heterodimer Levels, Mitosis and Spindle Morphology in Saccharomyces...segregation and nuclear positioning during mitosis. Defects in these mitotic functions can...tubulin. A second surveillance mechanism in mitosis, the spindle position checkpoint, is...
Using Pool Noodles to Teach Mitosis and Meiosis by John Locke , Heather...LEARNING the biological processes of mitosis and meiosis (M M) is fundamental...function of sister chromatids. For mitosis, the students will have to organize...
...Regulation of Mlh1p Heterodimers in Meiosis and Mitosis in Saccharomyces Cerevisiae by Victoria...Mismatch repair during meiosis and mitosis: Mismatch repair during meiosis was analyzed...functional requirements of Mlh3p during mitosis and meiosis are different. The fact that...
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magazine articles on: Mitosis  - 77 results

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...asexually--by simple cell division, mitosis. During this process, the cell body...quite a different process from simple mitosis. The reproductive cells--germ cells...stage of the human being occur by simple mitosis. Every subsequent developed cell, no...
...Mitosiso3, because in 1997 I had created a mitosis Web site as a cell biology course supplement...When a board user searched the Web for "mitosis," they found my site and assumed that...number. I thought about deleting the mitosis site from the university server. But...
...we show a (simplified) concept map for mitosis. This concept map shows the different steps in mitosis (prophase, metaphase, and so on), their...constraints. For example, the result of mitosis is exactly two diploid cells. The current...
...maintain their place in the nucleus through mitosis or get lost in the shuffle. Biochemist...chromosomal blocks arrange themselves through mitosis, Bickmores group inserted GFP-tagged...that chromosomes final positions after mitosis dont match parent-cell locations. Nuclear...
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newspaper articles on: Mitosis  - 13 results

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...Dowson is coming back to the region this week. Her exhibition Mitosis opens at the Henshelwood Gallery in Jesmond at 6.30pm on...department and guest artist with the Northern Print Studio. Mitosis runs until February 25. Old friends FORMER students of Monkseaton...
...plant systematist. Cytology, he says, is the study of cells. Right now, he is counting chromosomes of cells in mitosis. Mitosis, basically, is plant sex. With his microscope, he is attacking the "problem," as he puts it, of where all...
...Revolution Party," the video game, and creative teachers use it as a tool. Imagine learning biology by singing, "My oh my, mitosis/ When chromosomes divide ... set to the Monkees "Daydream Believer." Some people take their karaoke very seriously...
...lives in Charlestown, Co Mayo. According to Dr Aldridge, growing children are most open to microwave poisoning, owing to mitosis where cells split apart and new ones are formed. As part of the process, the body has a cell repair mechanism which completes...
...section on human reproduction. The coverage is detailed and complete, with detailed discussion of meiosis as compared with mitosis, primary meiotic division, secondary division with prophase, metaphase, anaphase and telophase nicely laid out. The book...
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encyclopedia articles on: Mitosis  - 20 results

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MITOSIS mito sis, mi , process of nuclear division...distributed to identical daughter nuclei. Mitosis is almost always accompanied by cell division...of the mitotic process. The pattern of mitosis is fundamentally the same in all cells...
...flagella, near the apex of the cell. Mitosis in this class involves phycoplasts, microtubules...the nuclear envelope disintegrates when mitosis begins. During cell division the mitotic...be two or more apical flagella. During mitosis, the nuclear envelope and the mitotic...
...dinoflagellates is asexual, through simple division of cells following mitosis. They are unusual in that in each cell, the chromosomes remain...very numerous chromosomes are divided equally at the time of mitosis . The dinoflagellates are important constituents of plankton...
...offspring or into cells that develop into offspring (see meiosis ; mitosis ) of a constitution similar or potentially similar to that...celled organisms it most commonly takes the form of fission, or mitosis , the division of one individual into two new and identical...
...both by the formation of spores and by simple cell division ( mitosis ). Yeasts, for instance, reproduce by forming spores as...directly into the gametophyte generation, which produces (by mitosis) male and female reproductive cells that when united give...
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