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Cell Division

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Cell Division Mitosis, meiosis and cytokinesis Cell Division Results in the formation of two identical daughter cells Each daughter cell will be roughly the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cell Division


1
Cell Division
  • Mitosis, meiosis and cytokinesis

2
Cell Division
  • Results in the formation of two identical
    daughter cells
  • Each daughter cell will be roughly ½ the size of
    the parent cell
  • Before the cell divides, the DNA of the cell must
    be copied and separated (mitosis)
  • Actual cell division is called cytokinesis.

3
Why do cells have to divide
  • Limits to size!
  • Surface area/volume ratio
  • Trouble exchanging materials with its outside
    environment
  • Too much demand placed on DNA
  • Larger the cell, more proteins need to be made!
  • Only one copy of each DNA molecule in a cell!

4
Cell Division
  • Mitosis occurs exclusively in eukaryotic cells.
  • In multicellular organisms, the somatic (body
    cells) cells undergo mitosis, while germ cells
    (cells destined to become sperm in males or ova
    in females) divide by a related process called
    meiosis.
  • Prokaryotic cells, which lack a nucleus, divide
    by a process called binary fission.

5
Forms of DNA
  • DNA Proteins Chromosomes
  • Most of the time, DNA is unspooled into loose
    strands called chromatin
  • can be used to provide instructions in this form.
  • Before a cell divides, the DNA winds around
    histone proteins and becomes visible as
    chromosomes
  • The chromosomes can be counted in this form.

6
Structure of DNA
Nucleosome
Chromosome
DNA double helix
Coils
Supercoils
Histones
7
Chromosome number
  • Eukaryotic organisms have a specific number of
    different types of chromosomes.
  • They have two of each type so chromosomes come
    in pairs.
  • Cells with chromosomes present in pairs are said
    to be diploid (2N)
  • one of each is haploid

8
Chromosome identity
  • Each chromosome type can be identified by shape
    and size.
  • If stained, characteristic patterns of bands can
    be seen as well.
  • A karyotype is a display of all of an
    individuals chromosomes arranged by type.
  • Can be used to identify major genetic disorders.

9
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10
Chromosome number
  • Each organism has a different number of
    chromosomes
  • Camel 70 Chicken 78
  • Opossum 22 Housefly 22
  • Bat 44 Corn 24
  • Lentil 14 Rice 24
  • Goat 60 Barley 14
  • Apple 34 Lettuce 12
  • HUMANS HAVE 46! 23 different pairs

11
DNA ? By the Numbers
  • In a diploid (2N) eukaryotic cell, one set of
    chromosomes comes from the mother and another
    from the father.
  • Each human gets 23 from each parent (46 total)
  • 44 are autosomes (general body characteristics)
    and two are sex chromosomes (determine sex and
    carry general characteristics)

12
  • The two corresponding chromosomes are called
    homologous chromosomes. Homologous chromosomes
    need not be genetically identical.
  • For example, a gene for eye color at one locus
    (location) on the father chromosome may code for
    green eyes, while the same locus on the mother
    chromosome may code for brown.

13
  • Regardless of the number, before a cell can
    divide, it must generate an exact copy of each
    chromosome.
  • When the cell divides, each daughter cell will
    get one copy of each of the total number of
    chromosomes.

14
Before Cell Division, each chromosome must
replicate!
  • Individual chromosomes replicate and form sister
    chromatids.
  • Each sister chromatid is destined for one of the
    two resulting daughter cells

15
  • The copies are called sister chromatids, and
    together they are considered one chromosome.
  • After separation, however, each sister chromatid
    is considered a full-fledged chromosome by
    itself. The two copies of the original chromosome
    are then called sister chromosomes

16
After Replication ? Chromosomes
17
The Cell Cycle
  • Sequence of events a cell goes through as it
    grows and divides
  • (G1 Phase) Cell grows and synthesizes proteins
    and new organelles
  • (S Phase) Chromosomes replicate
  • (G2 Phase) Organelles and molecule used in cell
    division are produced
  • (M Phase) mitosis and cytokinesis, the actual
    division of the cell into two daughter cells.

18
Cell Division M-Phase
  • Consists of TWO steps (Mitosis and Cytokinesis)
  • Mitosis ? process by which a cell separates its
    duplicated genome into two identical halves.
    Mitosis only separates the newly replicated
    chromosomes DNA replication does not occur
    during mitosis.
  • broken down into five phases (PMAT)
  • Prophase, Metaphase, Anaphase, Telophase.
  • Cytokinesis which divides the cytoplasm and cell
    membrane.

19
Mitosis ? Prophase
  • Longest phase of mitosis
  • Chromosomes condense (become visible)
  • Centrioles (in cytoplasm) separate and move to
    opposite sides of cell
  • Nuclear membrane breaks-down
  • Microtubule structure called the spindle develops
    (attaches from centrioles to chromosomes

20
Chromosome Structure
  • Prior to separation, the two sister chromatids
    are attached together in a specialized region of
    the chromosome known as the centromere.

21
Mitosis ? Metaphase
  • Chromosomes line-up along center of cell
    (metaphase plate)
  • Each chromosome is connected to its centromere by
    a spindle fiber

22
Mitosis ? Anaphase
  • Sister chromatids separate into separate
    chromosomes
  • Separated chromosomes pulled to opposite sides

23
Mitosis ? Telophase
  • Chromosomes move together at opposite ends of the
    cell and become less condensed
  • Spindle breaks apart
  • Two new nuclear membrane form
  • Result is one cell with 2 nuclei!

24
Cytokinesis
  • Remember, NOT part of mitosis
  • Animals
  • Cell membrane pinches off cytoplasm into two
    equal parts at a region called the cleavage
    furrow
  • Plants
  • Cell Plate develops between two new nuclei which
    grows into a separating membrane and ultimately a
    separating cell wall

25
Mitosis Animation
  • Cell Cycle Animation
  • http//www.cellsalive.com/mitosis.htm

26
Limits to Division?
  • The big problem with eukaryotes is that they have
    to replicate linear chromosomes. The polymerase
    enzyme cant work all the way to the end, so the
    chromosome gets shorter with each round of
    replication.
  • Solution use special ends called telomeres that
    get recreated with a special enzyme called
    telomerase. This may play a crucial role in
    human aging if the chromosome ends fail to
    replicate properly, the chromosomes gradually
    lose parts of their end sequence.

27
Regulation of Cell Cycle
  • Not all cells move through cell cycle at same
    rate
  • Bone marrow cells/skin cells ? continuous
    division
  • Nerve and muscle cells ? seldom or never

28
Cycle Regulators
  • The cell cycle is regulated by special proteins
    called cyclins and cyclin-dependent kinases.
  • High concentrations of cyclin influences a cell
    to divide.
  • Internal Regulators ? proteins that respond to
    internal stimuli cell cycle checkpoints!
  • Ex. Cell will not enter mitosis until all
    chromosomes are replicated
  • External Regulators ? proteins that respond to
    external stimuli
  • Ex. Cell will begin to divide rapidly after
    injury
  • Ex. When dividing cells come in contact with
    adjacent cells, division will slow

29
WHEN CELLS GO BAD!
  • When a bodys cell lose the ability to control
    growth, cancer is the result.
  • Cancer cells do not respond to chemical signals
    that tell them to stop growing.
  • Form masses of cells called tumors that damage
    surrounding tissues.

30
Meiosis
  • We know that regular somatic (body) cells contain
    TWO sets of chromosomes (diploid/ 2N)
  • When a sexually reproducing organism produces
    gametes (sex cells) they must somehow separate
    these pairs of chromosomes so gametes only get
    one set.
  • WHY?

31
Ex. Humans
  • Normal Diploid (2N) somatic cell contains _____
    chromosomes (_____ pairs)
  • Gametes (sperm and egg cells) need to contain
    _________ chromosomes.
  • We generate these HAPLOID (N) cells through the
    process of meiosis!

32
Steps of Meiosis
  • Divided into two distinct stages
  • Meiosis I
  • Meiosis II
  • Starts with one diploid cell and ends with 4
    haploid daughter cells
  • Before meiosis begins, DNA undergoes replication
    just like in mitosis!

33
Meiosis I Prophase I
  • Appearance of the chromosomes, the development of
    the spindle, and the breakdown of the nuclear
    membrane (envelope).
  • Each replicated chromosome pairs up with its
    corresponding homologous chromosome
  • Paired chromosomes (4 chromatids) form a tetrad

34
Tetrads and crossing over
  • It is during this alignment that chromatid arms
    may overlap and temporarily fuse (chiasmata, or
    synapsis), resulting in crossovers
  • Segments of homologous chromosomes may switch
    places where overlap occurs.

35
What is Crossing Over?
  • Paired-up homologous chromosomes, may exchange
    portions of their chromatids
  • Advantage?

36
Meiosis I Metaphase I
  • Here is where the critical difference occurs
    between Metaphase I in meiosis and metaphase in
    mitosis. In the latter, all the chromosomes line
    up on the metaphase plate in no particular order.
    In Metaphase I, the chromosome pairs are aligned
    on either side of the metaphase plate.

37
Meiosis I Anaphase I
  • During Anaphase I the homologous pairs separate
    from each other and move along the spindle fibers
    to each pole of the cell.

38
End of Meiosis I
  • At the end, each daughter cell has a single set
    of chromosomes, half the total number in the
    original cell where the chromosomes were present
    in pairs.
  • While the original cell was diploid, the daughter
    cells are now haploid. This is why Meiosis I is
    often called reduction division.

39
Meiosis II
  • Meiosis II is quite simple in that it is simply a
    mitotic division of each of the haploid cells
    produced in Meiosis I.
  • There is no Interphase between Meiosis I and
    Meiosis II

40
Meiosis II Prophase II
  • A new set of spindle fibers forms and the
    chromosomes begin to move toward the equator of
    the cell.

41
Meiosis II Metaphase II
  • All the chromosomes in the two cells align with
    the metaphase plate.

42
Meiosis II Anaphase II
  • Sister chromatids separate as they are pulled by
    spindle fibers

43
Meiosis II Telophase II
  • A cleavage furrow develops, followed by
    cytokinesis and the formation of the nuclear
    membrane (envelope).
  • When Meiosis II is complete, there will be a
    total of four daughter cells, each with half the
    total number of chromosomes as the original cell.

44
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45
Meiosis in Males and Females
  • In male animals, meiosis results in the formation
    of 4 ___________ cells
  • In female animals, meiosis results in the
    formation of one _______ cell and three small
    polar bodies which die.

46
Advantages/Disadvantages of sexual reproduction?
  • Recombination of maternal and paternal
    chromosomes in the gamete results in genetic
    variation among the offspring. In an environment
    which changes, this allows the process of natural
    selection to occur.
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