Title: M I T O S I S
1t h e M - p h a s e
M I T O S I S
The process of cell replication
2Genes and Proteins
- Proteins do the work of the cell growth,
maintenance, response to the environment,
reproduction, etc. - Proteins are chains of amino acids. The sequence
of amino acids in each protein is coded in the
DNA as a specific sequence of A, C, G and T
bases a gene. - Each gene codes for a different protein.
3Genes and Proteins
- Key points
- All cells within an organism have the same genes.
- What makes cells different from each other is
that different genes are turned on and turned off
in different cells. - The DNA must be copied and then divided exactly
so that each cell gets an identical copy.
4MITOSIS VS. MEIOSIS
- Mitosis is normal cell division, which goes on
throughout life in all parts of the body.
Meiosis is the special cell division that creates
the sperm and eggs, the gametes. We will discuss
meiosis separately. - Mitosis and meiosis occur in eukaryotes.
Prokaryotes use a different methodbinary
fission to divide.
5NUMBERS OF CHROMOSOMES
- Humans have 46 chromosomes
- 23 from each parent
- Every cell has the same 46 chromosomes
- Each species has a characteristic number of
chromosomes - corn has 20,
- house flies have 10,
- chimpanzees have 48.
6SOME VOCABULARY
- Chromosomes exist in 2 different states
- Chromatin Between cell divisions, DNA/protein
complex is loosely coiled (easier for protein
synthesis) - Chromatid Right after DNA replication, the
chromosomes are tightly coiled together (it is
easier to arrange chromosomes this way) - There are 2 copies of the chromosome
- Centromere The two copies of the chromatid
after replication are held together by the
centromere.
7CELL CYCLE
- Some cells divide constantly cells in the
embryo, skin cells, gut lining cells, etc. Other
cells divide rarely or never only to replace
themselves. - Actively dividing cells go through a cycle of
events that results in mitosis. Most of the
cycle was called interphase by the
microscopists who first studied cell division.
During interphase the cell increases in size, but
the chromosomes are invisible. - The 3 stages of interphase are called G1, S, and
G2.
8INTERPHASE
- Interphase is the normal part of cellular
function. It includes the following (about 90
of cell life) - G1 phase
- S phase
- G2 phase
9http//www.biology.arizona.edu/cell_bio/tutorials/
cell_cycle/cells2.html
metaphase
anaphase
telophase
prophase
M I T O S I S
1
G2 (Gap 2)
M
cytokinesis
2
G1 (Gap 1)
THE CELL CYCLE
G0
S-Phase (DNA Self- Replication)
10G1 (GAP 1) PHASE
- G1 (Gap) is the period between mitosis and S,
when each chromosome has 1 chromatin (not
chromatid). Cells spend most of their time in
G1 it is the time when the cell grows and
performs its normal function. Control of cell
division occurs in G1 a cell that isnt destined
to divide stays in G1, while a cell that is to
divide enters the S phase.
11S PHASE
- The S phase (Synthesis) is the time when the
DNA is replicated, when the chromosome goes from
having one chromatin to having 2 chromatids held
together at the centromere.
12G2 (GAP 2) PHASE
- G2 is the period between S and mitosis. The
chromosome have 2 chromatids, and the cell is
getting ready to divide.
13Pictures of cells during interphase
- HOW TO IDENTIFY INTERPHASE
14nucleolus (if any) still visible
Interphase
nuclear envelope clearly visible
chromatin, NO chromosomes, yet
http//www.fed.cuhk.edu.hk/johnson/photomicrograp
hs/mitosis/animal/animal_interphase.htm
15INTERPHASE
http//iccbweb.med.harvard.edu/mitchisonlab/Pages/
mt.html
16interphase
interphase
17INTERPHASE
Allium root tip
Coregonus blastula
18INTERPHASE is the normal lifetime of a cell,
after being born by division, and before it
divides itself.
MITOSIS
INTERPHASE is not a stage of mitosis !
Biological Science, a Molecular Approach. BSCS
Blue Version. Heath and Company, 1996.
19What is MITOSIS ?
THE PROCESS BY WHICH TWO NEW NUCLEII ARE FORMED,
WITH EXACTLY THE SAME KIND AND NUMBER OF
CHROMOSOMES AS THE PARENT CELL. (1 CELL TO 2
CELLS)
http//fairmanstudios.com/als.htm
20STEPS IN MITOSIS (In AP, the phases are not
emphasized)
- PROPHASE
- METAPHASE
- ANAPHASE
- TELOPHASE
21PROPHASE
- In prophase, the cell begins the process of
division. - The chromosomes condense. The proteins attached
to the DNA cause the chromosomes to go from long
thin structures to short fat one, which makes
them easier to pull apart (VISIBLE). - The nuclear envelope disappears. The double
membrane that surround the nucleus dissolves into
a collection of small vesicles, freeing the
chromosomes to use the whole cell for division - Centrosomes form and move to opposite poles.
During interphase, the pair of centrosomes were
together just outside the nucleus. In prophase
they separate and move to opposite ends of the
cell. - The spindle starts to form, growing out of the
centrosomes towards the chromosomes.
22PROMETAPHASE
- Nuclear membrane fragments
- Spindle interaction with chromosomes
- Kinetochore develops at the centromere (this is
where the spindle microtubules are going to bind)
23Pictures of cells during prophase
24PROPHASE
- Nuclear membrane dissolves.
- Centrioles migrate form spindle.
http//www.blc.arizona.edu/courses/181gh/Lectures_
WJG.01/mitosis_F.01/mitosis.html
25PROPHASE
nuclear envelope disappears
nucleolus disappears
chromosomes become visible
http//www.ac-dijon.fr/pedago/svt/documents/mitose
/prophase.gif
26PROPHASE
http//www.itg.uiuc.edu/technology/atlas/structure
s/mitosis/prophase.htm
27PROPHASE
Coregonus blastula
Allium root tip
28METAPHASE
- Metaphase is a short resting period where the
chromosomes are lined up on the equator of the
cell, with the centrosomes at opposite ends and
the spindle fibers attached to the kinetochore.
Everything is aligned for the rest of the
division process to occur.
29Pictures of cells during metaphase
- HOW TO IDENTIFY METAPHASE
30METAPHASE
chromatids
spindle
centriole
http//www.chembio.uoguelph.ca/educmat/chm736/cycl
etx.htm
- chromatids line up on the equator.
31METAPHASE
TWO IDENTICAL COPIES OF ONE CHROMOSOME.
THIS CHROMATID WILL SOON MOVE TO NORTH POLE
THIS CHROMATID WILL SOON MOVE TO SOUTH POLE
http//genenlab.spoono.com/gnu/mandm.shtml
32chromatids
spindle
centriole
Nature (408. 423, 2000).
http//www.blc.arizona.edu/courses/181gh/Lectures_
WJG.01/mitosis_F.01/mitosis.html
33METAPHASE
http//iccbweb.med.harvard.edu/mitchisonlab/Pages/
mt.html
34METAPHASE
Coregonus blastula
Allium root tip
35ANAPHASE
- In anaphase, the centromeres divide. At this
point, each individual chromosome goes from - 1 chromosome with 2 chromatids to
- 2 chromosomes with one chromatid each.
- Then the spindle fibers contract, and the
chromosomes are pulled to opposite poles, towards
the centrosomes.
36Pictures of cells during ANAPHASE
37ANAPHASE
- chromatids migrate
- to each pole.
http//www.blc.arizona.edu/courses/181gh/Lectures_
WJG.01/mitosis_F.01/mitosis.html
38ANAPHASE
http//www.univ-orleans.fr/SCIENCES/BIOCHIMIE/MMC/
accueil.htm
39ANAPHASE
early
late
Conly Rieder http//www.wadsworth.org/BMS/SCBlink
s/WEB_MIT2/HOME.HTM
40ANAPHASE
Coregonus blastula
Allium root tip
41TELOPHASE
- In telophase the cell actually divides.
- The chromosomes are at the poles of the spindle.
- The spindle disintegrates
- The nuclear envelope re-forms around the two sets
of chromosomes (become less coiled). - The cytoplasm is divided into 2 separate cells,
the process of cytokinesis.
42CYTOKINESIS
- The organelles (other than the chromosomes) get
divided up into the 2 daughter cells passively
they go with whichever cell they find themselves
in. - Plant and animal cells divide the cytoplasm in
different ways. - In plant cells, a new cell wall (CELL PLATE)made
of cellulose forms between the 2 new nuclei,
about where the chromosomes lined up in
metaphase. Cell membranes form along the
surfaces of this wall. When the new wall joins
with the existing side wall, the 2 cells have
become separate. - In animal cells, a ring of actin fibers
(microfilaments are composed of actin) forms
around the cell equator and contacts, pinching
the cell in half. (CLEAVAGE FURROW)
43CELL CYCLE CONTROL
- These will control whether a cell divides or not
- Growth Factor a protein that is released that
induces a cell to divide (cell communication) - Density-Dependent Inhibition if an area is too
crowded with cells, cell division is inhibited.
If the area lacks cells, division is allowed to
occur - Anchorage Dependence must be attached to a
substrate
44Pictures of cells during ANAPHASE
- HOW TO IDENTIFY TELOPHASE
45TELOPHASE
http//www.bmb.psu.edu/courses/bisci2/mitosis/mito
sis.htm
- Mitotic spindle dissolves.
46TELOPHASE
ONE DAUGHTER NUCLEUS FORMS AT NORTH POLE
ONE DAUGHTER NUCLEUS FORMS AT SOUTH POLE
SPINDLE APPARATUS DISSOLVES
47TELOPHASE
early
late
New nuclei form at the poles.
Cytokinesis begins.
http//www.blc.arizona.edu/courses/181gh/Lectures_
WJG.01/mitosis_F.01/mitosis.html
48TELOPHASE
49TELOPHASE
Coregonus blastula
Allium root tip
50Summary of Mitosis
- Prophase
- Chromosomes condense
- Nuclear envelope disappears
- centrosomes move to opposite sides of the cell
- Spindle forms and attaches to centromeres on the
chromosomes - Metaphase
- Chromosomes lined up on equator of spindle
- centrosomes at opposite ends of cell
- Anaphase
- Centromeres divide each 2-chromatid chromosome
becomes two 1-chromatid chromosomes - Chromosomes pulled to opposite poles by the
spindle - Telophase
- Chromosomes de-condense
- Nuclear envelope reappears
- Cytokinesis the cytoplasm is divided into 2
cells
51http//www.dartmouth.edu/artsci/bio/cbbc/courses/b
io4/bio4-lectures/theCell.html
1
2
CYTOKINESIS
MITOSIS is about organizing and distributing
CHROMOSOMES
52Cancer
- Cancer is a disease of uncontrolled cell
division. It starts with a single cell that
loses its control mechanisms due to a genetic
mutation. That cell starts dividing without
limit, and eventually kills the host. - Normal cells are controlled by several factors.
- Normal cells stay in the G1 stage of the cell
cycle until they are given a specific signal to
enter the S phase, in which the DNA replicates
and the cell prepares for division. Cancer cells
enter the S phase without waiting for a signal. - Normal cells are mortal. This means that they
can divide about 50 times and then they lose the
ability to divide, and eventually die. This
clock gets re-set during the formation of the
daughter cells. Cancer cells escape this process
of mortality they are immortal and can divide
endlessly. - Normal cells that suffer significant chromosome
damage destroy themselves due to the action of a
gene called p53. Cancer cells either lose the
p53 gene or ignore its message and fail to kill
themselves.
53Cancer Progression
- There are many different forms of cancer,
affecting different cell types and working in
different ways. All start out with mutations in
specific genes called oncogenes. The normal,
unmutated versions of the oncogenes provide the
control mechanisms for the cell. The mutations
are caused by radiation, certain chemicals
(carcinogens), and various random events during
DNA replication. - Once a single cell starts growing uncontrollably,
it forms a tumor, a small mass of cells. No
further progress can occur unless the cancerous
mass gets its own blood supply. Angiogenesis
is the process of developing a system of small
arteries and veins to supply the tumor. Most
tumors dont reach this stage. - A tumor with a blood supply will grow into a
large mass. Eventually some of the cancer cells
will break loose and move through the blood
supply to other parts of the body, where they
start to multiply. This process is called
metastasis. It occurs because the tumor cells
lose the proteins on their surface that hold them
to other cells.
54How is cancer harmful?
- What are the ways in which cancer is harmful?
- Some examples
- Lung cancer can damage the surrounding tissue and
prevent the normal functioning of the lung until
it collapses or fails - Stomach cancer can prevent the uptake of
nutrients and cause loss of food uptake - Bone cancer can prevent the creation of blood
cells - Some cancers create chemcials that can disrupt
the delicate balance of the body - Some cancers can lead to infections
55Cancer Treatment
- Two basic treatments surgery to remove the
tumor, and radiation or chemicals to kill
actively dividing cells. - It is hard to remove all the tumor cells. Tumors
often lack sharp boundaries for easy removal, and
metastatic tumors can be very small and anywhere
in the body. - Radiation and chemotherapy are aimed at killing
actively dividing cells, but killing all dividing
cells is lethal you must make new blood cells,
skin cells, etc. So treatment must be carefully
balanced to avoid killing the patient. - Chemotherapy also has the problem of natural
selection within the tumor. If any of the tumor
cells are resistant to the chemical, they will
survive and multiply. The cancer seems to have
disappeared, but it comes back a few years later
in a form that is resistant to chemotherapy.
Using multiple drugs can decrease the risk of
relapse its hard for a cell to develop
resistance to several drugs at the same time.
56WHAT DO YOU THINK?
- What do you think would be the OVERLYING purpose
of cancer research? - What do you think are the major strategies to
cure cancer?
57DEXOSOMES
- Create dendritic cells
- Induce the production of dexosomes (activates
immune system) - Load the dexosomes with a peptide (protein that
is found on a marker for cancer cells . . . acts
as an antigen) - The peptide loaded dexosomes activate your immune
system to attack and destroy cancer cells.