The Cell Cycle and Mitosis
Your cells spend about 90% of their time in interphase, just living their cellular lives. During this time, they're busy preparing for possible division by copying DNA, duplicating centrioles, and building up energy. Some cells, like skin cells, divide frequently while others, like nerve cells, rarely divide at all.
When a cell is ready to divide, it enters mitosis, which happens in four main phases. First comes prophase, where centriole pairs separate and move apart, spindle fibers begin to form, and chromosomes condense into visible X-shaped structures. This is when things start getting exciting!
In metaphase, centrioles anchor at opposite ends of the cell, and chromosome pairs line up neatly along the cell's middle. Spindle fibers attach to both chromosomes and centrioles, positioning each chromosome pair so spindle fibers don't accidentally grab two of the same chromosome.
Fun Fact: If you could watch mitosis happening under a microscope in real time, you'd see the chromosomes moving like they're being pulled by invisible strings - those are the spindle fibers at work!
During anaphase, chromosome pairs separate, and centrioles pull the newly separated chromosomes to opposite ends of the cell. This creates two equal sets of genetic material. Finally, in telophase, chromosomes unwind back into chromatin, spindle fibers break down, and a new nuclear membrane forms around each set of chromatin. The process finishes with cytokinesis, where the cell membrane pinches in the middle to create two identical daughter cells.