Respuesta :
It’s the stage when the sister chromatids of every chromosome separate and begin to move towards the opposite ends of the cell
Answer: During anaphase II, the third step of meiosis II, the sister chromatids of each chromosome separate and move toward opposite poles. Once they are no longer connected, the former chromatids are called unreplicated chromosomes. In anaphase II, chromosomes divide at the centromeres (like in mitosis) and the resulting chromosomes, each with one chromatid, move toward opposite poles of the cell. Four haploid nuclei (containing chromosomes with single chromatids) are formed in telophase II. Anaphase II is the stage when sister chromatids of every chromosome separate and begin to move towards the opposite ends of the cell. The separation and the movement is due to the shortening of the kinetochore microtubules. Anaphase II precedes telophase II. Meiotic anaphase II is similar to the anaphase in mitosis. brainliest?
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