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Study Guide Mitosis Steps of the cell cycle (Textbook pages 94 – 95) 1. Interphase – Cell spends most of its life in this phase. Chromosomes and organelles are copied before the end of this phase. 2. Prophase – Mitosis begins. Nuclear membrane breaks apart and chromosomes condense into rod like structures. They begin to move to the opposite sides of the cell. Prophase 3. Metaphase – Chromosomes line up along the equator of the cell. Metaphase 4. Anaphase – Chromatids separate and are pulled to opposite sides of the cell by fibers attached to the centrioles. Anaphase 5. Telophase – The nuclear membrane forms around the 2 sets of chromosomes. They unwind and the fibers disappear. Mitosis ends. Telophase 6. Cytokinesis – Cytoplasm splits into two after mitosis is complete. The result is 2 identical cells. End of mitosis. 7. Cell Cycle (Textbook page 92) – The life cycle of a cell. 8. The human body cells have 46 homologous chromosomes or 23 pairs (Textbook page 93). 9. Centromere – Where Chromatids are held together (Textbook page 93). 10.Mitosis – The complicated process of chromosome separation (Textbook page 93). Includes prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase. 11.Meiosis – formation of sex cells. Involves a second division, so that sperm and egg cells end up with ½ the DNA of a regular body cell. 12.Binary fission – Cell division in which one cell splits into 2 parts (Textbook page 92). 13.There are four stages to mitosis (Prophase, Metaphase, Anaphase, and Telophase) (Textbook page 93). 14.Chromosomes – Where the DNA of a cell is organized into structures (Textbook page 93). 15.Chromatids – identical copies of chromosomes, held together by the centromere. 16.Cell Plate – When plant cells divide, a cell plate forms in the middle of the cell, and the cell is split in two (Textbook page 95, Figure 14).