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Cells produced in mitosis contain an identical copy of the parent cell's genetic material, including chromosomes and DNA. The daughter cells are also usually similar in size and shape to the parent cell.
Yes, daughter cells produced through mitosis are typically identical to each other because they contain the same genetic information as the parent cell.
Identical, different.
During mitosis, somatic cells are formed. These are diploid cells that are identical to the parent cell from which they originated. Mitosis is responsible for growth, development, and tissue repair in multicellular organisms.
Mitosis produces two daughter cells that are genetically identical to the parent cell.
Mitosis is the type of cell division which takes place during growth, repair and asexual reproduction. So the types of cells produced are normal body cells eg skin, brain, muscle, bone, liver etc, in other words they are not reproductive cells. Cells produced by mitosis are exact copies of the parent cell: they have the same number of chromosomes and the same genes. Reproductive cells (eggs and sperm) are produced by the alternative type of cell division called meiosis.