Aim: How is the cell cycle regulated?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Figure 3.30 Cell Cycle  Interphase  Growth (G 1 ), synthesis (S), growth (G.
Advertisements

The life cycle of a cell Cell cycle consists of 2 major phases
Chapter 12: The Cell Cycle Cell cycle: life of a cell from its formation from a dividing parent cell until its own division into 2 cells Cell cycle: life.
Somatic Cell Division Mitosis. Somatic Cells All body cells except gametes (sex cells)
Figure 2.19 Cell Division: Mitosis and Cytokinesis Process Diagrams Step-by-Step Copyright © 2007 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
copyright cmassengale
Overview: The Key Roles of Cell Division
Aim: How is the cell cycle regulated? Do Now: 1.Worksheet HW: Study for test tomorrow.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint ® Lecture Presentations for Biology Eighth Edition Neil Campbell.
Mader: Biology 8 th Ed. The Cell Cycle and Cellular Reproduction Chapter 9.
The Cell Cycle and Cellular Reproduction. Outline  Interphase  Mitotic Stage  Cell Cycle Control  Apoptosis  Mitosis  Mitosis in Animal Cells 
The Cell Cycle Chapter 12. When do cells divide?  Reproduction  Replacement of damaged cells  Growth of new cells  In replacement and growth cell.
Slides 1 to 102 Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings.
PowerPoint ® Lecture Slide Presentation by Patty Bostwick-Taylor, Florence-Darlington Technical College Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing.
Chapter 9 Cell Cycle and Mitosis.
Lecture ??? Date ______ Chapter 12~ The Cell Cycle.
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings The Cell Cycle.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings. Cell Cycle Figure 17.1  Interphase: between cell divisions  G1: primary growth.
The Cell Cycle. When do cells divide? Reproduction Replacement of damaged cells Growth of new cells In replacement and growth cell divisions how should.
Multicellular organisms depend on cell division for: – Development from a fertilized cell – Growth – Repair.
Aim: How can we apply our knowledge of cells and biochemistry? Test tomorrow HW due tomorrow.
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Chapter 12 The Cell Cycle.
The Cell Cycle. Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Eukaryotic cell division consists of: – ________, the division.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings.
Chapter 12 The Cell Cycle.  The continuity of life  Is based upon the reproduction of cells, or cell division.
CELL DIVISION AND REPRODUCTION © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.
Cell Division and Differentiation
Chapter 12 The Cell Cycle.
The events in the life of a cell
Fig Figure 12.1 How do a cell’s chromosomes change during cell division?
Cell Division: Key Roles
Chapter 12: The Cell Cycle 1.
Lecture #5 Date ______ Chapter 12~ The Cell Cycle.
What stage is it?? The sister chromatids are moving apart.
Cell Cycle and Mitosis.
Mitosis is conventionally divided into five phases:
Chapter 12 The Cell Cycle.
The Cell cycle Chapter 12.
The Cell Cycle Chapter 12 Unit 4.
Interactive notes: pgs
The Cell Cycle
Cell Growth.
The Cell cycle Chapter 12.
Cell Cycle Review.
Organelles Ribosomes - sites of protein synthesis.
The Cell Cycle.
Cell Cycle and Mitosis.
Chapter 9 Mitosis.
Translation.
Cell Cycle and Cell Communication 3. A
THE CELL CYCLE “The Circle of Life”.
Cell Division 1.6.
Cellular Division (Mitosis)
Chapter 12 The Cell Cycle.
The Cell Cycle.
The Cell cycle Chapter 12.
KEY CONCEPT Cells divide during mitosis and cytokinesis.
Cell Cycle and Mitosis.
Mitosis.
Chapter 8 The Cell Cycle.
The Cell Cycle & Cell Division
Cell Division #1 JEOPARDY S2C06 Jeopardy Review.
The Cell Cycle & Cell Division
Cell Biology I. Overview
Chapter 12 The Cell Cycle.
Mitosis.
Chapter 12 The Cell Cycle.
Mitosis.
Cell Cycle and Mitosis.
Cell Cycle Review 3.A.2 – In eukaryotes, heritable information is passed to the next generation via processes that include the cell cycle, meiosis and.
Presentation transcript:

Aim: How is the cell cycle regulated? Do Now: Please pass up HW Worksheet HW: Study for test on Thursday HW due on Thursday Research Paper due on 11/4/2015

A Cell’s Life Cycle Figure 3–23 The Cell Life Cycle.

The Cell Cycle Most of a cell’s life is spent in a nondividing state (interphase) Body (somatic) cells divide in three stages DNA replication duplicates genetic material exactly Mitosis divides genetic material equally Cytokinesis divides cytoplasm and organelles into two daughter cells

A Cell’s Life Cycle Figure 3–23 The Cell Life Cycle.

A Cell’s Life Cycle Interphase The non-dividing period G-zero (G0) phase—specialized cell functions only G1 phase—cell growth, organelle duplication, protein synthesis S phase—DNA replication and histone synthesis G2 phase—finishes protein synthesis and centriole replication Mitosis Duplicated DNA divides into two sets of chromosomes

Control of Cell Destiny MPF- Maturation promoting factor (MPF) Signal that induces cell division. Consists of group of enzymes called cdc2 proteins (and proteins called cyclins. Cyclins build up during interphase and then activates cdc2 proteins which activates MPF which results in cell division. Apoptosis Programmed cell death

Tumor Suppressor Genes Produce proteins that normally inhibit cell division. Loss or alternation of p53 gene leads to breast cancer, colon cancer, and other tumors. Normal p53 gene protein arrests a cell in G1 which prevents cell division. Repair of damaged DNA and induces apoptosis in the cells where repair was not successful

Oncogenes Most oncogenes are mutations of certain normal genes called proto-oncogenes. When a proto-oncogene mutates (changes) into an oncogene, it becomes a "bad" gene that can become permanently turned on or activated when it is not supposed to be. A defective cell will divide an not undergo apoptosis.

Pericentriolar material 1 Early Late (d) ANAPHASE Pericentriolar material Nucleolus Nuclear envelope Chromatin Plasma membrane Cytosol (a) INTERPHASE Centrioles Centrosome: (f) IDENTICAL CELLS IN INTERPHASE Cleavage furrow (e) TELOPHASE (c) METAPHASE Cleavage furrow 2 3 4 5 6 (b) PROPHASE Fragments of nuclear envelope Mitotic spindle (microtubules) Kinetochore Metaphase plate Chromosome all at 700x LM Centromere (two chromatids joined at centromere 1 Early Late (d) ANAPHASE Pericentriolar material Nucleolus Nuclear envelope Chromatin Plasma membrane Cytosol (a) INTERPHASE Centrioles Centrosome: Cleavage furrow (e) TELOPHASE (c) METAPHASE 2 3 4 5 Cleavage furrow (b) PROPHASE Fragments of nuclear envelope Mitotic spindle (microtubules) Kinetochore Metaphase plate Chromosome all at 700x LM (two chromatids joined at centromere Centromere 1 Early Late (d) ANAPHASE Pericentriolar material Nucleolus Nuclear envelope Chromatin Plasma membrane Cytosol Chromosome (a) INTERPHASE Centrioles Centrosome: (c) METAPHASE 2 3 4 Cleavage furrow (b) PROPHASE Fragments of nuclear envelope Mitotic spindle (microtubules) Kinetochore Metaphase plate all at 700x LM (two chromatids joined at centromere Centromere 1 Pericentriolar material Nucleolus Nuclear envelope Chromatin Plasma membrane Cytosol Metaphase plate (a) INTERPHASE Centrioles Centrosome: (c) METAPHASE 2 3 Late Early (b) PROPHASE Fragments of nuclear envelope Mitotic spindle (microtubules) Kinetochore all at 700x LM Chromosome (two chromatids joined at centromere Centromere 1 Late Early Pericentriolar material Nucleolus Nuclear envelope Chromatin Plasma membrane Cytosol Chromosome (two chromatids joined at centromere (a) INTERPHASE (b) PROPHASE Centrioles Centrosome: Fragments of nuclear envelope Mitotic spindle (microtubules) Kinetochore 2 all at 700x LM Centromere 1 Pericentriolar material Nucleolus Nuclear envelope Chromatin Plasma membrane Cytosol (a) INTERPHASE Centrioles Centrosome: all at 700x LM

Tumors and Cancer Figure 3–26 The Development of Cancer. Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings

Regulating the Cell Life Cycle Normally, cell division balances cell loss Increased cell division Internal factors (M-phase promoting factor, MPF) Extracellular chemical factors (growth factors) Decreased cell division Repressor genes (faulty repressors cause cancers) Worn out telomeres (terminal DNA segments)

Slower mitotic rate means longer cell life Rate of cell division Slower mitotic rate means longer cell life Muscle cells, neurons rarely divide Exposed cells (skin and digestive tract) live only days or hours. Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings

Tumors and Cancer Cancer develops in steps Abnormal cell Primary tumor Metastasis Secondary tumor Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings

Summary Why is interphase important to a cell? Distinguish mitosis and meiosis. Define apoptosis Why are tumor suppressor genes important?

Regulating the Cell Life Cycle Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings