During Transcription, an mRNA is created in the nucleus.
Explanation:
Transcription is the mechanism where the genetic information contained in one strand of the DNA molecule is decoded in the messenger RNA (mRNA) molecule, which will be subsequently used as template to synthesize a protein during translation. In eukaryotes, transcription is a nuclear process that has three phases: initiation, elongation and termination. During initiation, an RNA polymerase enzyme and different transcription factors form the initiation complex that binds to the promoter gene region and thus synthesizes the first RNA nucleotides. Subsequently, this RNA sequence is elongated by the action of the RNA polymerase. Finally, during termination, the terminator sequence in the DNA template induces the release of the DNA and this mRNA sequence is terminated.
Anaphase would be the correct answer. So you know anaphase is the shortest phase of mitosis; because literally all that happens is chromatids are pulled to polar opposite sides of the cell. All the work for this phase is completed in metaphase when spindle fibers (microtubules) grow from the centrioles and bind to the kinetochores of the chromosome.
Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) typing is used in forensic science for it serves as an important tool in determining the recovered damaged, degraded or small sample source of the DNA. Mitochondrial DNA is a small genome that is found in the mitochondria, just outside of the nucleus of the cell.