Everything about Telophase totally explained
Telophase (sometimes spelled
telephase), from the
ancient Greek "τελος" (end) and "φασις" (stage), is a stage in either
meiosis or
mitosis in a
eukaryotic cell reversing the effects of
prophase and
prometaphase events.
Cytokinesis, if slated to occur, usually occurs at the same time the nuclear envelope is reforming, although they're distinct processes. In
animal cells, a
cleavage furrow develops where the
metaphase plate used to be, pinching off the separated nuclei.
In plant cells, vesicles derived from the
Golgi apparatus move to the middle of the cell along a microtubule scaffold called the
phragmoplast. This structure directs packets of
cell wall materials which coalesce into a disk-shaped structure called a
cell plate. The
cell plate grows out centrifugally and eventually develops into a proper cell wall, separating the two nuclei.
Each daughter cell has a complete copy of the
genome of its parent cell, and mitosis is complete.
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