In this video, we're going to introduce the phases of mitosis. Recall from our previous lesson videos that mitosis is an asexual process because it only involves one single parent cell. Mitosis is the asexual process defined as the division of the nucleus. It will divide the nucleus and the genetic material of the cell. That cell is specifically going to be a somatic cell or a body cell, which is a cell that is not passed down from generation to generation and it stays within the same multicellular organism. Mitosis is going to start with one single diploid cell that has two copies of every chromosome, and it's going to end with two genetically identical diploid cells. Not only does it start with a diploid cell, but it also ends with diploid cells. These two cells that are diploid are genetically identical to each other, and this is what makes mitosis an asexual process.
This line right here that's highlighted in green is going to be a very key line to understand mitosis and to distinguish mitosis from meiosis when we cover meiosis later on in our course. This is a line that you really want to make sure that you have committed to your memory. It turns out that mitosis actually consists of five different phases that we have numbered down below. This image that you see down below right here represents mitosis, and within mitosis, there are five phases. The first is Prophase, then there's Prometaphase, Metaphase, Anaphase, and Telophase. Notice that mitosis ends with a single cell, so notice that the cell is still technically connected, but this single cell has two nuclei. So, it's really just division of the nucleus. You start with one nucleus, and it ends with two nuclei, and that is what mitosis is defined as. It's defined as the division of the nucleus and the genetic material in a somatic body cell.
Mitosis, the division of the nucleus, is going to be followed up by another process called cytokinesis, which we'll talk about later in our course, which is going to be the division of the cytoplasm. It will end up separating the cell here in half so that each daughter cell ends up having their own nucleus. As we move forward in our course, we're going to talk about each of these individual stages of mitosis and the most important events that take place during each of these phases. This concludes our introduction to the phases of mitosis. We'll get to talk more about each of these phases as we move forward. So, I'll see you all in our next video.