Title: Cell Reproduction
1Cell Reproduction
2Cell Division
- A basic feature of living things is the ability
to reproduce themselves - Unicellular organisms produce a new individual
- Multicellular organisms create new members
- Cell division can occur for several reasons
- Create new individuals, reproduction
- Replace worn out cells
- Repair damage
3- Eukaryotes and prokaryotes differ
- Prokaryotes with simpler structure binary
fission - Cell divides into two
- Eukaryotes the nucleus must divide Mitosis
- Makes exact copy clone - of parent cell
Identical daughter cells
4Binary fission 1st, DNA must all be copied so
each cell gets the same blueprint. Then the cell
splits into two cells
http//www.anselm.edu/homepage/jpitocch/genbio/bin
fission.JPG
5Eukaryotic cell division
- More complicated
- More DNA, packaged in pieces chromosomes
- Chromosomes come in pairs
- homologous chromosomes
- Nuclear membrane in the way
- Microtubules used to pull chromosomes around
6Homologous chromosomes
Same, but not identical.
Karyotype analysis
7Cell cycle
- The cell doesnt suddenly decide to divide and
poof, mitosis happens. - The activities of the cell can be described as a
cell cycle. - Overview of the cells activity
- Interphase resting stage
- Mitosis nuclear division
- Cytokinesis division of the cytoplasm
8The Cell Cycle
9Interphase
- Cell is busy doing its job just not dividing
- Nerve cells spend most of life in interphase
- Cancer cells spend little time in interphase
- Three parts
- G1 or Gap 1 or growth phase
- S phase Synthesis of DNA cell is committed to
division - G2 or Gap 2
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11Normally, DNA is wrapped around proteins
(histones) to make nucleosomes (beads on a
string). This is wound up to make a solenoid
which is looped around in the nucleus, appears as
chromatin.
For mitosis, DNA has to be wrapped up even
tighter so it can be easily divided up.
12Mitosis
- Refers specifically to division of the nucleus
- Four phases
- Prophase
- Metaphase
- Anaphase
- Telophase
- We look for things that are happening to break
mitosis into steps, but it is one continuous
process. - PMAT
13Centrioles the puppet masters.
Themselves made of microtubules, they organize
the microtubules that attach to the chromosomes
and pull them to where they belong.
14Prophase
- Chromosomes wind up or condense
- 2 meters / cell
- Linked by centromere
- Sister chromatids pairs of identical chromosomes
- Nucleoli disappear mitotic spindle forms from
the centrioles - Mitotic spindle web of microtubules that
attaches to DNA to control where it goes.
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17Late prophase (also called Prometaphase)
- Nuclear membrane disappears
- Nuclear membrane would just be in the way.
- Chromatids attach to fibers of mitotic spindle by
means of specialized structure called a
kinetochore - Review centromere is where sister chromatids
attach to each other kinetochore is thepart of
the centromere where the microtubules attach to
the sister chromatids. Chromatids are identical
pieces of DNA made during S phase of the cell
cycle.
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21Metaphase
- Chromosomes line up in the center of the cell at
the metaphase plate a disc - The next step of mitosis doesnt happen until ALL
the chromosomes are lined up and ready to go.
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24Anaphase
- Centromere splits
- Microtubles of mitotic spindle pull members of
each pair of duplicate chromosomes to opposite
sides of the cell.
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28Telophase
- Mitotic spindle disappears
- Nuclear membranes form
- Chromosomes unwind
- In other words, everything does back to the way
it was except now there are two nuclei, and the
rest of the cell is dividing too.
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31Cytokinesis
- Division of the cytoplasm
- Accompanies mitosis
- Begins in anaphase and finishes after telophase
- Animal cells form a contractile ring using actin
one of the proteins found in muscles. - Indentation is called the cleavage furrow
- Pinches the cells apart
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35Plant cells
- Mitosis occurs in plants as in animal cells, but
cytokinesis is different because of the plant
cell wall. - A disc of new membrane called the cell plate
forms between the two cells during telophase and
expands until it reaches the edges of the cell
membrane. - The new cells then make cellulose fibers to form
new cell walls.
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37What controls whether a cell divides?
- Cell size
- hormones
- Growth factors
- Cyclins proteins that increase and decrease
during the cell cycle
38Much of what we know about how and why a cell
divides was learned from trying to understand why
cells lose control.
- Cancer is unregulated cell growth
- If we know what normally controls cell division,
we can find out how it goes bad. - Genes involved in cell regulation named from
cancer studies - Oncogenes genes that turn on division
- Oncology the study of cancer
- Tumor suppressor genes prevent unwanted cell
division.
39Tumors - neoplasms
- Cells have lost control over cell division
- Multiply, often without stopping.
- Benign tumors grow only in one area
- Cancers invade local tissues (look like a crab)
and can metastasize or spread to other areas of
the body through the vascular or lymphatic systems
40Cancer cells lose contact inhibition.
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