Apedia

Anaphase Fibers Separate Chromosomes Chromatids Migrating Opposite Sides

In anaphase, sister chromatids are pulled apart by spindle fibers and move to opposite poles of the cell.

Anaphase is when spindle fibers separate sister chromatids, moving them to opposite sides of the cell.

Text Anaphase: fibers separate chromosomes into chromatids, the chromatids migrating to opposite sides of the cell.

Learn with these flashcards. Click next, previous, or up to navigate to more flashcards for this subject.

Next card: Mitosis fibers connect centromeres pull chromosomes anaphase

Previous card: Metaphase fibers align chromosomes center cell

Up to card list: AP Biology Complete Deck