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Mitosis 1 of 13 © Boardworks Ltd 2011 2 of 13 © Boardworks Ltd 2011 Mitosis Most animals and plants begin life as a single cell, but grow to contain billions and billions of cells. How does one cell become many? The type of cell division that makes animals and plants grow is called mitosis. parent In mitosis, a parent cell divides into two identical daughter cells. These daughter cells divide in two, and so on. Mitosis also replaces old and damaged cells and allows organisms to asexually reproduce. 3 of 13 cell mitosis daughter cells © Boardworks Ltd 2011 Copying the genetic code The two daughter cells produced by mitosis are genetically identical to the parent cell. The genetic code is contained in chromosomes in the nucleus of each cell. In animal body cells, chromosomes are generally found in pairs. All the genes and chromosomes from the parent cell must be copied and passed on to the daughter cells. Normally, a cell only contains one copy of each chromosome, but before dividing a cell must duplicate all its chromosomes. 4 of 13 © Boardworks Ltd 2011 How do chromosomes replicate? 5 of 13 © Boardworks Ltd 2011 What are the stages of mitosis? Once the chromosomes have duplicated, mitosis takes place. This is a continuous process but can be divided into several parts: Each chromosome replicates so it contains two identical chromatids. The chromosomes align in the middle of the parent cell. The two chromatids in each chromosome are pulled apart into separate halves of the cell. The cell splits in two to produce two daughter cells, each containing the same chromosomes. 6 of 13 © Boardworks Ltd 2011 What happens during mitosis? 7 of 13 © Boardworks Ltd 2011 The stages of mitosis 8 of 13 © Boardworks Ltd 2011 Chromosomes during mitosis 9 of 13 © Boardworks Ltd 2011 10 of 13 © Boardworks Ltd 2011 Glossary 11 of 13 © Boardworks Ltd 2011 Anagrams 12 of 13 © Boardworks Ltd 2011 Multiple-choice quiz 13 of 13 © Boardworks Ltd 2011