All living organisms start their life journey from a single cell. A single cell grows to form multiple cells, thereby including all microorganisms. Initially, the cells reproduce into two cells. The process continues when parent cells give rise to daughter cells every time they divide. The two new daughter cells can grow by themselves, divide further, and develop more cells, increasing the cell population.
The cell population increases with the growth and division of the parental cell and its progeny. Thus, a single cell gives rise to other cells and forms a structure of millions of cells, resulting in organisms. The sequence of events that makes the cell eventually divide into two daughter cells is called a cell cycle, and the phase that the cells go through is cell division. Today, in this article, we will be talking about the Cell Cycle and Cell Division, Phases of the Cell Cycle, Cytoplasm division, and more. Make sure you stick by us till the end. So, without any further ado, let’s dive directly into it!
During cell division, DNA replication and cell growth happen in cells. The entire process of cell division, involving DNA replication, cell growth, correct division, results in progeny cells that contain intact genomes. The sequential event where the cell divides into daughter cells to constitute millions of cells is called the cell cycle. Hence Cell Cycle and Cell Division are essential processes in all living organisms.
The duration of the cell cycle varies based on organisms and cell types. There are two primary phases of the cell cycle.
The phase between two successive Mitosis phases is called Interphase. It takes only one hour in the 24-hour average duration of a human cell cycle. The Interphase lasts for nearly more than 95% of the cell cycle duration. Interphase is called the resting phase as the cell prepares itself for dell division & for undergoing cell growth and DNA replication in a sequential manner.
The Interphase is further divided into three sub-phases – G1 phase (Gap 1), S phase (Synthesis), G2 phase (Gap 2). During these phases, the cell grows, DNA replicates in the nucleus, centriole duplicates in the cytoplasm, and proteins get synthesised and remain metabolically active.
Mitosis or actual cell division occurs in this phase. Nuclear division happens in this phase, where daughter chromosomes are separated. This is called karyokinesis and eventually results in cytoplasm division called cytokinesis. The components of the cells get reorganised in this phase. This phase involves four stages of nuclear division – Prophase, Metaphase, Anaphase, Telophase.
In Meiosis, cell cycle and cell division happen when a single cell divides twice. It produces four cells containing half the amount of genetic information that was originally contained. Hence, one meiosis cell divides twice, resulting in four daughter cells. These are the sex cells in humans – sperm in males and eggs in females. The key features of the meiosis process are as follows:
You now can understand the difference between a cell cycle and cell division. A cell has a series of phases that it has to undergo in a cell cycle and in cell division. The series of phases helps the cell split and increase in number. Cell cycle and cell division study material will enhance your knowledge and develop your learning towards cell division related to the cell cycle and the time taken by cells to replicate.