PLEASE HALP MEH
Cells divide for many reasons. For example, when you skin your knee, cells divide to replace old, dead, or damaged cells. Cells also divide so living things can grow. When organisms grow, it isn't because cells are getting larger. Organisms grow because cells are dividing to produce more and more cells. In human bodies, nearly two trillion cells divide every day.
The first stage of interphase is the G1 phase. During this stage, a new cell activates certain genes in its DNA in order to produce proteins. This process spurs on the metabolism of the cell that results in the production and breakdown of carbohydrates and lipids. The cell grows during this stage and converts food into energy from ATP. Disvover the synthesis (S) phase The synthesis stage of interphase occurs after the G1 stage and begins with the replication of cellular DNA. Complex teams of enzymes copy the DNA molecules of each chromosome. When the cells contain nearly double the original amount of chromosomes, they move on to the G2 phase. Finish with the gap two (G2) phase The final stage of interphase, the G2 phase, is when the cells prepare for division. An increase in synthesis of RNA and protein occurs, and the cells spend additional time checking and repairing the newly formed DNA sequences. This phase ends interphase. From here, cells continue on to the mitotic cycle of the cell cycle.
The primary mechanism by which organisms generate new cells is through cell division. During this process, a single “parent” cell will divide and produce identical "daughter" cells. In this way, the parent cell is able to pass on its genetic material to each of its daughter cells. First, however, the cells must duplicate their DNA. Mitosis is the process by which a cell segregates its duplicated DNA, ultimately dividing its nucleus into two.
In animal cells, the first sign of cytokinesis is the appearance of an indentation around the middle of the cell. The ring contracts like the pulling of a drawstring and pinches the parent cell in two. Because the two new nuclei are forming at the ends of the cell, cytokinesis results in two new cells.In cytokinesis a cell plate forms inside the cell and grows outward. Eventually this new piece of cell wall divides the cell in two. The result is two daughter cells, each bounded by its own continuous membrane and its own cell wall.
@Ultrilliam
uh
what do you need me for?
Put that into a essay bahahahaha
I took...Cells divide for many reasons. For example, when you skin your knee, cells divide to replace old, dead, or damaged cells. Cells also divide so living things can grow. When organisms grow, it isn't because cells are getting larger. Organisms grow because cells are dividing to produce more and more cells. In human bodies, nearly two trillion cells divide every day... and then I turned that into the following. Your cells need to divide for many reasons. Have you ever gotten a cut or scrape? Your cells need to be able to divide when that happens so that you are able to heal. Ever notice how you grow the older you get, that’s because your cells are constantly dividing so that you are able to grow bigger, not because your cells are getting larger, you’re just getting more of them.
x'D
essays aren't exactly my fortay x'D
Speak for both of us my dood
A month agooooooo
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