Mitosis
- Junessa Masaya
- Apr 15
- 3 min read
Updated: Jun 5
HSC Biology | Free Study Notes
In this lesson
the purpose of mitosis
how chromosomes behave during mitosis
the main stages of mitosis
why mitosis is important in growth and repair
What is mitosis?
Mitosis is a type of cell division that produces two genetically identical daughter cells.
It happens in body cells and is used when an organism needs to:
grow
repair damaged tissue
replace worn-out cells
reproduce asexually in some organisms
A useful exam point is that mitosis keeps the chromosome number the same in the daughter
cells.
Purpose of mitosis
The main purpose of mitosis is to make new cells that are genetically the same as the original parent cell.
Why this matters
This is important because:
growing tissues need more cells
damaged tissues need replacement cells
organisms must keep the same genetic information in body cells
Mitosis and continuity
In asexual reproduction, mitosis helps ensure continuity because new organisms can be formed with the same genetic code as the parent.
Chromosome behaviour in mitosis
Before mitosis begins, the DNA is replicated.
Both mitosis and meiosis require DNA replication, where the genetic content doubles before division.
What happens to chromosomes
During mitosis:
each chromosome has already been copied
the copied chromosomes are made of sister chromatids
sister chromatids separate during the process
each new cell receives one copy of each chromosome
Key idea
Mitosis keeps chromosome number constant, because each daughter cell gets a complete set of chromosomes.
Stages of mitosis
At this level, students should know the basic sequence of stages.
Prophase
In prophase:
chromosomes become visible
each chromosome consists of two sister chromatids
the nuclear membrane begins to break down
Metaphase
In metaphase:
chromosomes line up across the middle of the cell
Important point
In mitosis, chromosomes line up individually. Homologous pairs do not line up together, which helps distinguish mitosis from meiosis.
Anaphase
In anaphase:
sister chromatids separate
they move to opposite poles of the cell
This is one of the most important stage-specific facts to remember for exams.
Telophase
In telophase:
chromosomes reach opposite ends of the cell
new nuclear membranes form around them
the cell begins to split
Cytokinesis
After mitosis, cytokinesis divides the cytoplasm, producing two separate daughter cells.
Result
The end result is:
two daughter cells
genetically identical to each other
genetically identical to the parent cell, unless a mutation has occurred
Role in growth and repair
Growth
Mitosis is essential for growth because multicellular organisms need to increase their number of cells.
As an organism grows:
cells divide by mitosis
new cells are added
tissues become larger
Repair
Mitosis is also important in repair.
When cells are damaged or die:
mitosis produces replacement cells
tissue can heal
worn-out cells can be replaced
Why identical cells matter
Because mitosis produces genetically identical cells, the new cells usually function in the same way as the cells they replace.
Mitosis compared with meiosis
Students often confuse mitosis and meiosis, so it helps to keep the main contrast clear.
Feature | Mitosis | |
Number of daughter cells | 2 | 4 |
Genetic similarity | Identical | Genetically different |
Chromosome number | Stays the same | Halved |
Main role | Growth, repair, asexual reproduction | Gamete production |
Worked example
Exam-style question
Explain why mitosis is important in growth and repair.
Worked answer
Mitosis is important in growth and repair because it produces two genetically identical daughter cells. These new cells can increase the number of cells in a growing organism and replace damaged or worn-out cells in tissues.
Why this works
This answer:
states the outcome of mitosis
links mitosis to both growth and repair
uses the idea of genetically identical daughter cells
Common mistakes
Confusing mitosis with meiosis.
Saying mitosis produces gametes.
Forgetting that DNA is replicated before mitosis.
Saying homologous chromosome pairs line up in metaphase of mitosis.
Forgetting that sister chromatids separate during anaphase.
Quick quiz
What is the main purpose of mitosis?
How many daughter cells are produced by mitosis?
Are the daughter cells genetically identical or different?
What happens to sister chromatids during anaphase?
Why is mitosis important in tissue repair?

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