enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Mitosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitosis

    A few years later, he discovered and described mitosis based on those observations. [ 20 ] [ 21 ] [ 22 ] The term "mitosis", coined by Walther Flemming in 1882, [ 23 ] is derived from the Greek word μίτος ( mitos , "warp thread").

  3. Walther Flemming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walther_Flemming

    The centrosome was discovered jointly by Walther Flemming in 1875 [1] [2] and Edouard Van Beneden in 1876. [3] [4] Flemming investigated the process of cell division and the distribution of chromosomes to the daughter nuclei, a process he called mitosis from the Greek word for thread. However, he did not see the splitting into identical halves ...

  4. Cell division - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cell_division

    Cell division in prokaryotes (binary fission) and eukaryotes (mitosis and meiosis). The thick lines are chromosomes, and the thin blue lines are fibers pulling on the chromosomes and pushing the ends of the cell apart. The cell cycle in eukaryotes: I = Interphase, M = Mitosis, G 0 = Gap 0, G 1 = Gap 1, G 2 = Gap 2, S = Synthesis, G 3 = Gap 3.

  5. J. Richard McIntosh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._Richard_McIntosh

    The next year, McIntosh’s interests started to shift towards motor proteins. Kinesin, a motor protein found to move around vesicles in the cell, was recently discovered on another paper published the same year. [11] Here, McIntosh explored the possibility of kinesin as an important part of mitosis, as it can be found in the mitotic spindle. [11]

  6. Cell theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cell_theory

    The cell was first discovered by Robert Hooke in 1665 using a microscope. The first cell theory is credited to the work of Theodor Schwann and Matthias Jakob Schleiden in the 1830s. In this theory the internal contents of cells were called protoplasm and described as a jelly-like

  7. Eduard Strasburger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eduard_Strasburger

    Eduard Strasburger was born in Warsaw, Congress Poland, the son of Anna Karoline (von Schütz) and Eduard Gottlieb Strasburger (1803–1874). [2] [3] In 1870, he married Alexandra Julia ("Alexandrine") Wertheim (1847–1902), they had two children: Anna (1870–1942) and Julius (1871–1934).

  8. Neuronal cell cycle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neuronal_cell_cycle

    Christopher L. Frank1 and Li-Huei Tsai1, 2 (2009). Alternative functions of core cell cycle regulators in neuronal migration, neuronal maturation, and synaptic plasticity. NIH Public Access 62, 312–326. Fisher, R.P. (2012). The CDK network: Linking cycles of cell sdivision and gene expression. Genes and Cancer 3, 731–738. Frade, J.M. (2000).

  9. Oscar Hertwig - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oscar_Hertwig

    Within 10 years, the two brothers moved apart to the north and south of Germany. Oscar Hertwig later became a professor of anatomy in 1888 in Berlin ; however, Richard Hertwig had moved 3 years prior, becoming a professor of zoology in Munich from 1885 to 1925, at Ludwig Maximilian University , where he served the last 40 years of his 50-year ...