mitosis and the cell cycle how cells replace or “clone” themselves

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Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

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Page 1: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Mitosis and the Cell Cycle

How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Page 2: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Functions of Cell Division

Asexual Reproduction, Growth, Embryological Development, and RepairReproduction

Unicellular divide from one to two to reproduce entire organism (fission, budding)

Multicellular organisms grow and develop or replace damaged or dead cells.

Cell Division results in identical hereditary material and two daughter cells.

Page 3: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Cell Division

Replicates the DNA exactly.Allocates two copies of DNA to opposite ends of the cell.

Separates into two daughter cells.

Page 4: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Heredity

Total hereditary material of a species is called its genome.Some are very small (bacteria) while others are very large (eukaryotes)

Division of large eukaryotic genomes are possible because of smaller units called chromosomes.

Page 5: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Heredity

Offspring acquire genes from parents by inheriting chromosomes.DNA- Nucleic acid that codes for the formation of proteins. Made of four different nucleotides.

Genes- The length of DNA that codes for a protein.

Chromosomes- Sections of DNA that contain Genes and other Associated DNA.

Page 6: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Chromosome

Page 7: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Chromosome

Page 8: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Chromosome

Page 9: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Chromosome

Page 10: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves
Page 11: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves
Page 12: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Human Life Cycle

Where does Mitosis play a role in human development?

Page 13: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Cell Cycle

Page 14: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Cell Cycle

RatesSome continuous

RBCSome never or rarely

Muscle and Nerve

Alternates from Interphase and M phase

Page 15: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Cell Cycle

Interphase90% of cell cyclelots of activity

Metabolism, Protein synthesis, DNA Replication and increase in number of mitochondria and chloroplasts.

Three phasesG1- First growth phase (G = gap)S- SynthesisG2- Second growth phase

Page 16: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Interphase

Page 17: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Mitosis

Very reliable (one error in 100,000 divisions)

StagesProphaseMetaphaseAnaphaseTelophase (happens with Cytokinesis)

Page 18: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Stages of Mitosis

ProphaseNucleoli disappearChromatin condenseSpindle forms and attaches to Chromosomes

Centrosomes move apart

Page 19: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Prophase

Page 20: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Metaphase

The centrosomes are at opposite ends

Chromosomes are at metaphase plate

Centromeres are all lined upSpindle fully formed.

Page 21: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Metaphase

Page 22: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Spindle

Page 23: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Anaphase

Sister chromatids splitKinetochore fibers shortenNonkinetochore fibers lengthen and motor proteins “walk” past

Page 24: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Anaphase

Page 25: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Telophase

Nonkinetochore further elongate

daughter nuclei begin to formby the end two nuclei are clearly visible in their interphase appearance.

Page 26: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Animal Telophase

Page 27: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Plant Telophase

Page 28: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

How they move?

Page 29: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Cytokinesis

In plant cells the golgi apparatus secretes vesicles that fuse in the middle to form the cell plate. More add until a new middle lamella forms and new cellulose is laid down on either side.

Page 30: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves
Page 31: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Cytokinesis

In Animal cellsPinching forms a cleavage furrow.Contractile ring of actin fibers pinch the cells in two.

Page 32: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves
Page 33: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Binary Fission in Bacteria

Bacteria just have a single large loop of DNA as their genomic DNA.Some have extra genomic pieces called plasmids.Can be antibiotic resistantor F factors (fertility factors)

Fission happens when the chromosome duplicates itself, attaches to the inner cell and then grows and pulls the two copies apart.

Page 34: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Bacterial Fission

Page 35: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Bacterial Fission

Page 36: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Fission Animation

Page 37: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Regulation of Cell Cycle

Check points or switches control the rate of the cell cycle

Intracellular and extracellular control

G1 checkpoint or the Restriction point is said to be the beginning of the cell cycle.G0 state is the resting state

Page 38: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Cell Cycle Regulation

Protein Kinases are enzymes that transfer a phosphate group from ATP to a target protein

This activates these proteins Move into cell cycleThese Kinases are regulated by cyclins

Page 39: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Regulationhttp://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/olcweb/cgi/pluginpop.cgi?it=swf::535::535::/sites/dl/free/0072437316/120082/bio34a.swf::Control%20of%20the%20Cell%20Cycle

http://bcs.whfreeman.com/lodish5e/content/cat_010/21010-01.htm?v=chapter&i=21010.01&s=2..

Page 40: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Cyclin

Cyclin binds to CdK to produce MPFin the beginning the MPF phosphorylates proteins and make the chromatin condense

Nuclear membrane dispersionIn the second half it activates proteolytic enzymes that break down cyclin.

Page 41: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

External Cues

Chemical FactorsAll Kinetochores need to be attached to Chromosomes or Anaphase won’t begin.

Growth factorsPhysical factors

Density Dependent Inhibition

Page 42: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Cancer

No response to DDIMay make excess growth factorsMay have different signaling systems.

Normal checkpoints are not workingAre considered transformed cells (neoplastic transformation)

Page 43: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Cancer

Tumor is a mass of cells that have lost their ability to stop dividing.Malignant

can impair normal function of tissue, organ.

Altered cell cycle, excessive divisions.

May have different # of chromosomesaltered metabolismno DDI

Benign- stay at original site. Don’t impair normal function usually.

Page 44: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Cancer

Metastasis- cells move from original location move in blood, lymphcan be treated with radiation, chemotherapy.

Page 45: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Pet Scan

Page 46: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves
Page 47: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Looks at Cancer

Page 48: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Who is getting it?

Page 49: Mitosis and the Cell Cycle How cells replace or “clone” themselves

Monitor