Answer;
-Cell division
Explanation;
-Glandular epithelium is such type of a tissue that is responsible for the formation of glands. It is a type of striated epithelial tissue that covers the organs associated with secretion. Glandular epithelium forms the covering of all major glands. It is also present in the intestinal lining.
-Cells are regenerated by division in the basal layer and migrate toward the apical surface to replace cells lost by fragmentation. Cell division is indicated by the mitotic phase, cells located in the deepest basal layer of the glandular epithelium.
<span>"He who has more toys wins." would be the correct statement to fit the frontier ethic.</span>
Answer:
The best explanation if we observe an epithelial cell with chromosomes are visible and two cell nuclei is that the cell has just gone through telophase but not cytokinesis (option b).
Explanation:
A somatic cell, when found in mitosis, exhibits the chromosomes distributed in both poles and the outline of two nuclei in the telophase phase, just before cytokinesis.
In mitotic telophase:
- Chromatids, which are chromosomes, are found in the cell poles.
- It initiates the formation of the nucleus membrane.
- The chromosomes begin to turn into chromatin.
- Disappearance of the mitotic spindle, duplication of organelles and cytoplasmic invagination.
The division and differentiation of the nuclei in telophase is called karyokinesis. Later, cytokinesis occurs, where the daughter cells are separated.
The other options are not correct because:
<em> a and d. In the other phases described, </em><em><u>S and G1,</u></em><em> no chromosome distribution is observed at the poles.</em>
<em> c. A somatic cell does not experience </em><em><u>meiosis</u></em><em>.</em>
Answer:
blood cells,stem cells,muscle cells, skin cells.