Cell cycle is as follows- g1,s,g2,m( mitosis). Does this m stands for mitosis only or does this "m" stands for meosis also
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1Do you Know what the difference between mitosis and meiosis is? – Squareoot Jul 02 '18 at 18:39
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The headline of your question seems to be incomplete. Is there a word missing? – Arsak Jul 02 '18 at 19:29
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Yes i know that – roxaite Jul 03 '18 at 03:57
1 Answers
This is a question of convention really.
When people discuss the cell cycle, they usually refer to diploid cells (for diploid animals). So in your context, M stands for mitotic phase and does not directly apply to meiosis.
In meiosis, you could say that the cell also undergo a M-phase (actually two in a row, see footnote) but then the cell cycle becomes irrelevant as you get 4 haploid cells (gametes) that cannot duplicate by themselves anymore, effectively breaking the cycle.
Footnote
The M-phase in the cell cycle is a simplification of the process of cell division as this phase can be further sub-divided into a Prophase, Metaphase, Anaphase, Telophase (PMAT for the purists) followed by cytokinesis. In meiosis, you have a slightly different PMAT process during meiosis I (i.e. 1 cell -> 2 cells) followed by another PMAT (2 cells -> 4 cells). You can find additional information here.
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