ACCÈS RAPIDE AUX LIENS
The life cycle of a eukaryotic cell consists of various phases including mitosis (M phase) and synthesis (S phase). Mitosis is defined as the process by which a cell separates its duplicated genome into two identical daughter cells. During M phase, chromosome condensation and spindle formation are microscopically visible. Usually, this is followed immediately by cytokinesis, the process of cytoplasm and cell membrane division. In the S phase, the DNA of the cell is replicated, which can be detected using biochemical techniques. The G1 phase of the cell cycle refers to the gap between mitosis and the start of DNA replication, and the G2 phase refers to the gap between completion of DNA replication and the onset of mitosis. Regulation of the cell cycle predominantly occurs at three major control points, which govern the transition from G0 to G1, from G1 to S and from G2 to M phase. M phase itself is highly regulated, and is divided into five stages: prophase, prometaphase, metaphase, telophase and anaphase.
Informations pour la commande
Nom du produit | Ref. Catalogue | COND. | Prix HT | QTÉ | Favoris | |
Anticorps Mitotic Cells (2Q2271) | sc-71591 | 200 µg/ml | $316.00 |