• New nucleolus is formed. The astral rays and spindle fibres
disintegrate and disappear. The two daughter nuclei, each
containing haploid number of chromosomes are formed.
• The end of telophase-I marks the end of karyokinesis-I also.
Karyokinesis - I may be followed by cytokinesis-I.
Daughter
cells
Fig.:Telophase-I
Aster disappear
Nuclear membrane
appearing
Nucleolus
(appearing)
Spindle
disappear
interkinesis
• It is metabolic stage between telophase of meiosis I and
prophase of meiosis II.
• Protein and RNA synthesis may occur.
• Centrosomes or centriole pairs undergo replication in animal
cells. There is no DNA synthesis. It is short lived and
important to bring true haploidy in daughter cells.
meioSiS – ii
• It is called homotypic or equational division, because it
maintains the number of chromosomes produced at the end
of reduction division.
• It is similar to mitosis, despite it is not mitosis, due to the
following differences :
Meiosis II Mitosis
- It always occurs in haploid cells
and is shorter than mitosis.
It occurs in diploid
cells.
- It is not preceded by DNA
replication.
It is preceded by
DNA replication.
- Due to crossing over, two
chromatids of a chromosome are
dissimilar.
Two chromatids of
a chromosome are
similar.
• Meiosis II is divisible into prophase II, metaphase II,
anaphase II and telophase II.
Prophase - ii
• It is very short stage, occurs simultaneously in nuclei
formed from meiosis - I.
• In animal cells, the centriole pairs develop asters and move
to the regions of future spindle poles.
• The dyad chromosomes shorten a little and nucleolus and
nuclear envelope degenerate.
• In case where telophase I is omitted, the prophase II is
completely absent.
metaphase-ii
• The chromosomes arrange themselves at equatorial plate.
• achromatic bipolar fibrous spindles is formed which is in the
areas of dividing nuclei.
• Spindles are amphiastral in case of animal cells and
anastral in case of plant cells.
• each chromosome gets connected with both the spindle
poles by means of chromosome fibres or tractile fibrils
that develop from both the surfaces of its centromere.
anaphase-ii
• The two chromatids of a chromosome separate completely
and move towards the spindle poles along the path of their
fibres or tractile fibrils.
• The centromere of each chromosome divides into two.
telophase-ii
• at the end of anaphase II, four groups of chromosomes are
produced, each group having haploid number.
• each of these haploid groups get enclosed by a nuclear
envelope. Nucleolus also reappears.
cytokinesis
• Cytokinesis followed by meiosis II, resulting in the formation
of tetrad i.e., four haploid daughter cells. Cytokinesis can
be of two types, successive and simultaneous.