Respuesta :

During mitosis, daughter cells are produced that are genetically identical to their parent cells.

Before copying, or "replicating," its chromosomes, the cell evenly splits the copies to provide each daughter cell a full set. The growth phase (G1), during which the cell expands, precedes the DNA replication phase (S phase), which takes place during the cell cycle's interphase. One chromosome produces two chromatids during DNA replication, but only one centromere connects the two of them. Prior to cell division, every chromosome is duplicated, enabling each daughter cell to have the same genetic content. Additionally, this means that any errors produced during cell division that are not fixed will be passed on to the daughter cells from parent cells.

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