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The Cell Cycle and Mitosis

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Chapter 12 The Cell Cycle and Mitosis Concept 12.3 Most animal cells also exhibit anchorage dependence - to divide, the cell must be attached to a substratum (ex ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Cell Cycle and Mitosis


1
Chapter 12
  • The Cell Cycle and Mitosis

2
The Key Roles of Cell Division
  • Cell division functions in reproduction, growth,
    and repair
  • Unicellular organisms (ex. Amoeba) will divide to
    reproduce entire organisms
  • Cell division also will allows a multicellular
    organism to develop from a single cell

3
The Key Roles of Cell Division
  • DNA is passed from one generation of cells to the
    next without dilution.
  • -cell duplicates it DNA
  • - moves the 2 copies to opposite ends of the
    cell
  • - and then splits into 2 daughter cells

4
The Key Roles of Cell Division
5
Concept 12.1
  • Cell Division distributes identical sets of
    chromosomes to daughter cells
  • A cells genetic material is called its genome
  • - prokaryote single long DNA strand
  • - eukaryote number of DNA molecules

6
Concept 12.1
  • The replication and distribution of DNA is
    manageable because it is packaged into
    chromosomes
  • - the nuclei in human somatic cells contain 46
    chromosomes
  • - the nuclei in human gametes contains 23
    chromosomes

7
Concept 12.1
8
Concept 12.1
  • The DNA-protein complex is called the chromatin
    and is a long thin fiber.
  • After the chromatin is duplicated, it will
    prepare for division. It will condense and coil
    up to form chromosomes.

9
Concept 12.1
  • Each duplicated chromosome has 2 sister
    chromatids.
  • - each contains identical copies of the
    chromosomes DNA molecule
  • - they are connected together at the centromere

10
Concept 12.1
11
Concept 12.2
  • The mitotic phase alternates with interphase in
    the cell cycle
  • The mitotic (M) phase (mitosis and cytokenesis)
    is the shortest part of the cell cycle.
  • Interphase accounts for about 90 of the cell
    cycle.

12
Concept 12.2
  • Interphase can be divided into subphases
  • - G1 (first gap), S (synthesis), and G2 (second
    gap)
  • - during subphases, cell grows by producing
    proteins and organelles
  • - chromosomes are only duplicated during the S
    phase

13
Concept 12.2
14
Concept 12.2
  • Mitosis is broken down into 4 subphases
  • - prophase, metaphase, anaphase, and telophase
  • Prophase
  • - chromatin coil into chromosomes
  • - nucleoli disappears
  • - spindles begin to appear as centrosomes move
    to the poles of the cell

15
Concept 12.2
  • The cell moves into prometaphase
  • - nuclear envelope fragments
  • - kinetochore attaches to forming spindles
  • - cell prepares for metaphase

16
Concept 12.2
17
Concept 12.2
  • Metaphase
  • - centrosomes area at opposite poles
  • - chromosomes are on equator of cell, the
    metaphase plate
  • Anaphase
  • - begins when the centromeres of the chromosomes
    separate

18
Concept 12.2
  • - sister chromatids begin moving toward opposite
    poles
  • - by the end, the poles have equal sets of
    chromosomes
  • Telophase
  • - daughter nuclei form at the poles
  • - nuclear envelope begins to reform

19
Concept 12.2
  • - chromosomes become less tightly coiled
  • -Cytokenesis, the division of the cytoplasm,
    follows immediately

20
Concept 12.2
21
Concept 12.2
  • The mitotic spindle distributes chromosomes to
    the daughter cells
  • -during interphase, the single centrosome
    replicates to form 2 centrosomes during the
    early stage of mitosis, they separate and move
    toward opposite poles helping the spindle fibers

22
Concept 12.2
23
Concept 12.2
  • Cytokenesis divides the cytoplasm
  • - in animals, cytokenesis occurs by the
    formation of a cleavage furrow
  • - in plants the cleavage cannot occur because of
    the cell wall vesicles will move to the center
    of the cell to form the cell plate.

24
Concept 12.2
25
Concept 12.2
  • The origins of mitosis are believed to be from
    bacterial organisms of cell reproduction
  • - prokaryotes reproduce by binary fission
    (dividing in half)
  • - prokaryotes do not have mitotic spindles
    instead, once the DNA replicates, the copies of
    the region move apart rapidly

26
Concept 12.2
27
Concept 12.3
  • The cell cycle is driven by specific chemical
    signals present in the cytoplasm
  • Sequential events of the cell cycle are directed
    by a distinct cell cycle control system
  • - driven by a built in clock
  • - the cell cycle is regulated at certain
    checkpoints by internal and external controls

28
Concept 12.3
29
Concept 12.3
  • The checkpoint is a control point where stop and
    go-ahead signals can regulate the cycle
  • - kinases, a type of regulatory protein that
    activate or inactivate other proteins, give the
    signals for G1 and G2 checkpoints

30
Concept 12.3
  • To be active the kinase must be attached to a
    cyclin (kinases become cyclin-dependent kinases
    or Cdks)
  • - the activity of Cdks rises and falls with
    changes in the cyclin
  • - first called MPF maturation promoting
    factor or M-phase-promoting factor

31
Concept 12.3
  • - when cyclins accumulate during G2, MPF
    initiates mitosis
  • Internal and external cues help regulate the cell
    cycle
  • - for cells to divide a growth factor, a
    specific protein, is released to stimulate cell
    division

32
Concept 12.3
33
Concept 12.3
  • The discovery of growth factors has led us to
    understand density-dependent inhibition of cell
    division
  • - when a cell population reaches a certain
    density, the amount of growth factors and
    nutrients needed for division becomes
    insufficient for increased growth

34
Concept 12.3
  • Most animal cells also exhibit anchorage
    dependence
  • - to divide, the cell must be attached to a
    substratum (ex. inside of a culture jar or
    extracellular matrix of a tissue)

35
Concept 12.3
36
Concept 12.3
37
Concept 12.3
  • Cancer cells have escaped from cell cycle
    controls
  • - they do not respond to the control mechanisms
  • - they do not stop dividing when growth factors
    are depleted dont respond to density dependant
    inhibition

38
Concept 12.3
  • - if cancer cells stop dividing, it is at random
    points and not at the checkpoints
  • Caner begins when a single cell tissue undergoes
    a transformation
  • - if the cell evades destruction by the immune
    system it may form a tumor

39
Concept 12.3
  • - if the abnormal cell remain at the original
    site, it is called a benign tumor
  • - a malignant tumor becomes invasive enough to
    impair the functions of organs
  • - the spread of cancer cells from the original
    site is called metastasis

40
Concept 12.3
41
Concept 12.3
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