05/12/2015 ocr 21 st century b5 growth and development m barker shirebrook academy

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15/06/22 OCR 21 OCR 21 st st Century Century B5 Growth and B5 Growth and Development Development M Barker Shirebrook Academy

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Page 1: 05/12/2015 OCR 21 st Century B5 Growth and Development M Barker Shirebrook Academy

21/04/23

OCR 21OCR 21stst Century Century

B5 Growth and B5 Growth and DevelopmentDevelopment

M Barker

Shirebrook Academy

Page 2: 05/12/2015 OCR 21 st Century B5 Growth and Development M Barker Shirebrook Academy

21/04/23B5.1 How do organisms B5.1 How do organisms develop?develop?

Page 3: 05/12/2015 OCR 21 st Century B5 Growth and Development M Barker Shirebrook Academy

21/04/23

Cell specialisationCell specialisation

White blood cell

Egg cell (ovum)

Ciliated epithelial cell

Nerve cell (neurone)

During the development of a multi-celled organism cells differentiate to form specialised cells:

Page 4: 05/12/2015 OCR 21 st Century B5 Growth and Development M Barker Shirebrook Academy

21/04/23Cells, tissues, organs and Cells, tissues, organs and systemssystems

Basically, all living things are made up of cells…

A group of CELLS makes up a TISSUE

A group of TISSUES makes up an ORGAN

A group of ORGANS makes up a SYSTEM

A group of SYSTEMS make up an ORGANISM

Page 5: 05/12/2015 OCR 21 st Century B5 Growth and Development M Barker Shirebrook Academy

21/04/23

Another exampleAnother exampleHere’s another example in humans:

Muscle cells

Muscle tissue

Organ

System

Organism

Page 6: 05/12/2015 OCR 21 st Century B5 Growth and Development M Barker Shirebrook Academy

21/04/23

FertilisationFertilisation

The human egg and sperm cell (“GAMETES”) contain 23 chromosomes each and are created by meiosis.

When fertilisation happens the gametes fuse together to make a single cell called a ZYGOTE. The zygote has 46 chromosomes (23 pairs) and continues to grow through mitosis.

Page 7: 05/12/2015 OCR 21 st Century B5 Growth and Development M Barker Shirebrook Academy

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Embryos Embryos

When the zygote grows all of the initial cells are identical (up to the 8-cell stage). These are called “embryonic stem cells”. From this stage on the cells grow through mitosis and start to specialise.

Page 8: 05/12/2015 OCR 21 st Century B5 Growth and Development M Barker Shirebrook Academy

21/04/23

Adult Stem CellsAdult Stem Cells

White blood cell

Egg cell (ovum)

Ciliated epithelial cell

Nerve cell (neurone)

It is also possible to have adult stem cells – these are unspecialised cells that can become specialised later (but they can’t form ALL types of cell)

Adult stem cells can be found in places like bone marrow.

Page 9: 05/12/2015 OCR 21 st Century B5 Growth and Development M Barker Shirebrook Academy

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Plant Growth IntroductionPlant Growth IntroductionPlants grow due to their cells dividing through mitosis. The cells then specialise into root hair cells, palisade cells etc. Unlike animals, plants continue to grow for the rest of their lives.

Page 10: 05/12/2015 OCR 21 st Century B5 Growth and Development M Barker Shirebrook Academy

21/04/23

Plant Growth - MeristemsPlant Growth - MeristemsPlant growth occurs in areas called meristems. These meristems are “mitotically active”:

This meristem causes the plant to grow upwards.

This meristem causes the plant to grow in width.

Cells from the meristem behave like stem cells – they can develop into any kind of cell. Cloned plants can be produced from these cells.

Page 11: 05/12/2015 OCR 21 st Century B5 Growth and Development M Barker Shirebrook Academy

21/04/23Cloning Plants by tissue Cloning Plants by tissue cultureculture

1) Scrape of a few cells from the desired plant

2) Place the scrapings in hormones (“auxin”) and nutrients

3) 2 weeks later you should have lots of genetically identical plants

Page 12: 05/12/2015 OCR 21 st Century B5 Growth and Development M Barker Shirebrook Academy

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Plant HormonesPlant HormonesThe growth of roots and shoots is controlled by hormones:

In the roots hormones slow down growth of the cells in the lower region, which makes the root bend down.

In the shoots the hormone auxin is “destroyed” by light, so the shoot will bend towards the light as the cells on the shaded side grow quickest.

Page 13: 05/12/2015 OCR 21 st Century B5 Growth and Development M Barker Shirebrook Academy

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Some DefinitionsSome Definitions

Shoots grow towards light (positive phototropism) and against gravity (negative geotropism).

Roots grow away from light (negative phototropism) and in the direction of gravity (positive geotropism).

Page 14: 05/12/2015 OCR 21 st Century B5 Growth and Development M Barker Shirebrook Academy

21/04/23B5.2 How does an organism B5.2 How does an organism produce new cells?produce new cells?

Page 15: 05/12/2015 OCR 21 st Century B5 Growth and Development M Barker Shirebrook Academy

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Cell growth 1 - MitosisCell growth 1 - Mitosis

Each daughter cell has the same number of chromosomes and

genetic information as the parent – it’s a

“clone”.

The chromosomes are copied…

The chromosomes separate…

The nucleus divides…

Page 16: 05/12/2015 OCR 21 st Century B5 Growth and Development M Barker Shirebrook Academy

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Cell growth 2 - MeiosisCell growth 2 - Meiosis

Each daughter cell has half the number of

chromosomes of the parent.

Page 17: 05/12/2015 OCR 21 st Century B5 Growth and Development M Barker Shirebrook Academy

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Mitosis vs. MeiosisMitosis vs. MeiosisMitosis:

1. Used for growth and repair of cells

2. Used in asexual reproduction

3. Cells with identical number of chromosomes and genetic information are produced (“clones”)

Meiosis:

1. Used to produce haploid gametes for sexual reproduction

2. Each daughter cell has half the number of chromosomes of the parent

During meiosis copies of the genetic information are made and then the cell divides twice to form four daughter cells.

Page 18: 05/12/2015 OCR 21 st Century B5 Growth and Development M Barker Shirebrook Academy

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Fertilisation RevisionFertilisation Revision

The human egg and sperm cell (“GAMETES”) contain 23 chromosomes each and are created by meiosis.

When fertilisation happens the gametes fuse together to make a single cell called a ZYGOTE. The zygote has 46 chromosomes (23 pairs) and continues to grow through mitosis.

Page 19: 05/12/2015 OCR 21 st Century B5 Growth and Development M Barker Shirebrook Academy

21/04/23B5.3 How do Genes control B5.3 How do Genes control growth?growth?

Page 20: 05/12/2015 OCR 21 st Century B5 Growth and Development M Barker Shirebrook Academy

21/04/23Genes, Chromosomes and Genes, Chromosomes and DNADNA

Page 21: 05/12/2015 OCR 21 st Century B5 Growth and Development M Barker Shirebrook Academy

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Some facts:

- DNA has a “double ______” structure

- This contains instructions on what a cell does, how the organism should work etc

- The instructions are in the form of a ______

- The code is made up from the four ____ that hold the strands together with hydrogen bonds; A always pairs with T and C with G

- The bases represent the order in which _____ acids are assembled to make specific ________

How genes How genes work - DNAwork - DNA

Words – helix, amino, code, bases, proteins

Page 22: 05/12/2015 OCR 21 st Century B5 Growth and Development M Barker Shirebrook Academy

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Making proteinsMaking proteins1) DNA “unravels” and a copy of one strand is made

2) The strand copy is made to produce RNA

3) The copy (with its code) then moves towards the ribosome

4) The ribosome “decodes” the code which tells the ribosome how to make the protein

In other words, genes do NOT leave the nucleus but a copy of the gene (the mRNA) carries the genetic code to the cytoplasm.

Page 23: 05/12/2015 OCR 21 st Century B5 Growth and Development M Barker Shirebrook Academy

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Adult Stem CellsAdult Stem CellsCells inside an organism contain the same genes. So how can cells specialise if they have the same genes and make the same proteins?

The reason is that many of the genes in the nucleus are “switched off” so that the cell only produces the proteins it needs.

It is possible to “switch on” different genes to make the cell produce different proteins – this is the basis of stem cell research.

Page 24: 05/12/2015 OCR 21 st Century B5 Growth and Development M Barker Shirebrook Academy

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Stem cell researchStem cell researchAs well as adult stem cells from bone marrow, stem cells can also come from...

Egg and

sperm

Embryo

Cloned embryo

s

These stem cells have the potential to develop into any kind of cell. The rest of the embryo is destroyed. Most of these embryos come from unused IVF treatments.

The ethical issue:

Should these embryos be treated as humans?

Page 25: 05/12/2015 OCR 21 st Century B5 Growth and Development M Barker Shirebrook Academy

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Cloning AnimalsCloning AnimalsHere’s how Dolly the sheep was cloned:

Clone

Host mothersIt is possible to “switch on” inactive genes in the nucleus of a body cell to form cells of all tissue types. Are cloning and stem cell research the way forward???