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This is the FULL cell cycle-----
1. Interphase
subdivide into,G1, S, and G2
2. Mitosis(or Meiosis)
subdivide into PMAT
3. Cytokinesis (aka cytoplasmic division)

2007-04-20 16:24:40 · 3 answers · asked by AT 3 in Science & Mathematics Biology

I was just wondering, because I have seen this concept confused on the site so many times. And it bothers me when people are getting misinformed.

2007-04-20 16:36:57 · update #1

3 answers

Sometimes they just don't understand the difference between the cell cycle and mitosis or meiosis. They equate cell division with mitosis, not realizing that mitosis and meiosis have to do with dividing up the nuclear material.

In defense of students with these ideas, many of them have been taught to think this way in their science classes. Science teachers are not immune to the common misconceptions of science.

My students still want to say that a hypothesis is "an educated guess." They have the catchphrase, but they have no idea what they are saying.

2007-04-20 16:30:15 · answer #1 · answered by ecolink 7 · 2 0

as far as i be attentive to, your question is extremely confusing to respond to; not unanswerable, only so plenty greater complicated than you think of. right here is fact extensive type one: interphase is the longest section a cellular continues to be in while in comparison with the different ranges like the s section, or g section, and so on. fact 2: in this point the cellular is producing the fundamental "supplies" required for the cellular to split. So right here is the element, mitosis isn't inevitably the splitting of the cells cytoplasm to create 2 new cells, this is why muscle cells have greater advantageous than one nucleus. yet specific cells could desire to get replaced at specific expenditures and so undergo interphase and meiosis greater regularly than different cells. How long the cellular continues to be in each and every point is monitored, this is why we've issues like tumors/maximum cancers, that are out of control right now dividing cells occuring at a plenty quicker cost than primary. So consequently we can't say that interphase in mitosis is inevitably longer or shorter or precisely comparable to that of meiosis. Plus, we could desire to bear in mind that meiosis could happen at diverse cost for men because it does in women human beings; i'm not sure, consequently the "could."

2016-11-26 01:44:29 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

interphase is not exactly a cell division stage.it is the preparatory phase where the cell replicates dna,synthesises proteins and hence gets ready for division.so u cant exactly include interphase in meiosis and mitosis.it comes in both the cycles but is not included in either.

2007-04-20 16:51:02 · answer #3 · answered by ashwin parihar 2 · 0 1

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