Title: Cell Division
1Cell Division
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vQ6ucKWIIFmg
2Cell Division
- Doubling organelles and proteins
- DNA replication
- Nuclear division
- Cytoplasmic division
-
3Cell Increase and Decrease
- Maintain homeostasis
- Cell numbers kept in check by this mechanism
- Through cell division of somatic cells and cell
death - Cell division interphase, mitosis and
cytokinesis - Cell death apoptosis
4Cell Increase and Decrease
- Somatic cells
- Asexual reproduction
- increase in number of somatic cells
- Increase in number unicellular organisms
- Germ cells
- Sexual reproduction
- requires the production of eggs and sperm
5Important terms
- DNA
- Chromosomes
- Chromatin
- Chromatid
6Mitosis verse Meiosis??
- Mitosis
- Cell division mechanism that occurs in
nonreproductive cells - somatic cell nuclei
- Meiosis
- Cell division mechanism that occurs in cells that
participate in sexual reproduction - gamete nuclei
7Cell Cycle Somatic cells
- Set of stages that involves cell growth and
nuclear division - Consists of
- Interphase
- G1
- S
- G2
- Meiotic stage
- Mitosis and Cytokinesis
http//www.cellsalive.com/cell_cycle.htm
8Interphase
- When the cell carries on its usual functions
- Main stages
- G1
- Gap before DNA synthesis begins
- S
- Time when DNA duplicated
- G2
- Gap between time DNA duplication ends and mitosis
begins
9Interphase in Meiosis?
- Meiosis is a "one-way" process
- Cannot be said to engage in a cell cycle as
mitosis does - Preparatory steps that lead up to meiosis are
identical in pattern and name to the interphase
of the mitotic cell cycle
10Cytokinesis in Animal Cells
- Cytoplasmic cleavage
- Accompanies mitosis
- Separate process
- Cleavage furrow forms between daughter nuclei
- Contractile ring contracts deepening the furrow
- Continues until separation is complete
11Human DNA in somatic cells
- 22-23 pairs of homologous chromosomes
- Difference?
- Autosomes (1-22)
- Sex chromosomes (23)
- Somatic cells have 46 chromosomes
- Diploid
- 2n
12Human DNA in gametes
- Due to reductional division
- Halves the diploid number (2n) to a haploid
number (n) - 23 total chromosomes
13Division of the Nucleus
- Nucleus must be divided
- Parent cells DNA into 2 nuclei
- 2 ways nucleus can divide
- Mitosis
- Meiosis
14Mitosis
- Maintaining the Chromosome Number
15DNA ReplicationSomatic cells
- Duplicated chromosome
- Composed of 2 sister chromatids
- held together by a centromere
- Sister chromatids
- Genetically identical
- When separate, each daughter nucleus gets a
chromosome
DNA copied
DNA divided
16Chromosomes
- Chromosomes are paired in somatic cells
- homologous chromosomes, homologues
- contain information about the same traits but the
information may vary - Cells that have two of each type of chromosome
are called diploid cells - one chromosome of each pair is inherited from the
mother and the other is inherited from the father
17The difference between homologous chromosomes and
sister chromatids
18Mitosis
- Mitosis
- 4 main stages
- Prophase
- Metaphase
- Anaphase
- Telophase
19How the cell cycle works
20Mitosis
- 1. Prophase Mitosis begins!
- Threadlike form
- Spindle fibers appear
- DNA start to condense
- Aster formed
- Nuclear envelope starts to break apart
- Centrioles move to opposite sides of the cell
21Mitosis
- 2. Metaphase
- Duplicated chromosomes aligned midway between the
poles - Associated with spindle fibers
22Mitosis
- 3. Anaphase
- Sister chromatids separate from each other and
move to opposite poles - Become daughter chromosomes
23Mitosis
- 4. Telophase
- Return to threadlike form as in prophase
- New nuclear envelope separates each chromosome
cluster - 2 new nuclei!!!!!
http//www.cellsalive.com/mitosis.htm
24Meiosis
- Reducing the Chromosome Number
25Meiosis
- Mechanism for dividing the nucleus of germ cells
- Oogonia and spermatogonia
- 2n
- Meiosis must take place prior to formation of
gametes - Sperm and eggs
- n
- First stage in sexual reproduction
26Meiosis Overview
- Occurs in the life cycle of sexually reproducing
organisms - Reduces the chromosome number
- 2 divisions, 4 daughter cells
- Cells are diploid at beginning of meiosis
- TWO consecutive divisions
- Result is 4 haploid nuclei
- Divided into
- Meiosis I
- Meiosis II
27(No Transcript)
28Reducing the Chromosome Number
- Genetic Recombination
- Promotes genetic variability
- Happens by
- Crossing Over
- Independent Assortment of paired chromosomes
- Random Fertilization
29Meiosis comparison
- Crossing over
- Homologous chromosomes line up
- Homologous chromosomes split
- Two haploid cells formed
- Cytokinesis occurs
- Essentially the same as Meiosis I
- Starts with a haploid cell that has NOT undergone
chromosome duplication
30Comparisons between males and females
- Spermatogenesis
- Begins at puberty and continues throughout life
- Oogenesis
- Begins in the fetus
- Primary oocytes are arrested in prophase I
- At puberty, one primary oocyte continues the
process of meiosis during each menstrual cycle
31Comparisons
- Mitosis
- DNA replication occurs only once
- Requires only one division
- Produces two daughter cells
- Diploid daughter cells
- 2n
- Genetically identical cells produced
- Occurs all the time
- Meiosis
- DNA replication occurs only once
- Requires two divisions
- Produces four daughter cells
- Haploid daughter cells
- n
- Genetically variable cells produced
- Occurs only at certain times
320
MEIOSIS
MITOSIS
Parent cell (before chromosome duplication)
Site of crossing over
MEIOSIS I
Prophase I
Prophase
Tetrad formed by synapsis of homologous chromosome
s
Duplicated chromosome (two sister chromatids)
Chromosome duplication
Chromosome duplication
2n 4
Tetrads align at the metaphase plate
Chromosomes align at the metaphase plate
Metaphase I
Metaphase
Anaphase I Telophase I
Anaphase Telophase
Sister chromatids separate during anaphase
Homologous chromosomes separate (anaphase
I) sister chroma- tids remain together
Haploid n 2
Daughter cells of meiosis I
No further chromosomal duplication sister chromat
ids separate (anaphase II)
2n
2n
MEIOSIS II
Daughter cells of mitosis
n
n
n
n
Daughter cells of meiosis II
33Comparisons
34Overview of the Life Cycle of Humans
35Cell division in other organisms
36How Plant Cells Divide
- Occurs in meristematic tissues
- Same phases as animal cells
- Plant cells do not have centrioles or asters
37Plant Cells
38Cytokinesis in Plant Cells
- Flattened, small disk appears between daughter
cells - Golgi apparatus produces vesicles which move to
disk - Release molecules which build new cell walls
- Vesicle membranes complete plasma membranes
39Prokaryotes Have a Simple Cell Cycle
- Cell division in prokaryotes takes place in two
stages (simple cell cycle) - copy the DNA
- this process is called replication
- split the cell in two to form daughter cells
- this process is called binary fission
40Cell Division in Prokaryotes
- Binary Fission
- Prokaryotes have a single chromosome
- Chromosomal replication occurs before division
- Cell elongates to twice its length
- Cell membrane grows inward until division is
complete
41Alterations of chromosome number and structure
42Extra copy of chromosome 21 causes Down syndrome
0
- Trisomy 21 involves the inheritance of three
copies of chromosome 21 - Trisomy 21 is the most common human chromosome
abnormality - Imbalance in chromosome number causes Down
syndrome, which is characterized by - Characteristic facial features
- Susceptibility to disease
- Shortened life span
- Mental retardation
- Variation in characteristics
- The incidence increases with the age of the mother
430
440
90
80
70
60
Infants with Down syndrome (per 1,000 births)
50
40
30
20
10
0
40
45
20
35
30
25
50
Age of mother
45Accidents during meiosis can alter chromosome
number
0
- Nondisjunction is the failure of chromosomes or
chromatids to separate during meiosis - Fertilization after nondisjunction yields zygotes
with altered numbers of chromosomes
46Abnormal numbers of sexchromosomes
0
- Sex chromosome abnormalities tend to be less
severe as a result of - Small size of the Y chromosome
- X-chromosome inactivation
- In each cell of a human female, one of the two X
chromosomes becomes tightly coiled and inactive - random process that inactivates either the
maternal or paternal chromosome - Inactivation promotes a balance between the
number of X chromosomes and autosomes
470
48New species can arise from errors in cell division
0
- Polyploid species have more than two chromosome
sets - Observed in many plant species
- Seen less frequently in animals
- Example
- Diploid gametes are produced by failures in
meiosis - Diploid gamete Diploid gamete ? Tetraploid
offspring - The tetraploid offspring have four chromosome sets
49Alterations of chromosome structure can cause
birth defects and cancer
0
- Structure changes result from breakage and
rejoining of chromosome segments - Deletion is the loss of a chromosome segment
- Duplication is the repeat of a chromosome segment
- Inversion is the reversal of a chromosome segment
- Translocation is the attachment of a segment to a
nonhomologous chromosome can be reciprocal - Altered chromosomes carried by gametes cause
birth defects - Chromosomal alterations in somatic cells can
cause cancer
500
Deletion
Duplication
Homologous chromosomes
Inversion
510
Chromosome 9
Reciprocal translocation
Chromosome 22
Philadelphia chromosome
Activated cancer-causing gene