Cell Division Chapter 11 AP. Division in Prokaryotes Binary Fission – Lack a nucleus – Circular DNA attached to plasma membrane – At replication site.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Cell Cycle and Mitosis Cell Division part 2.
Advertisements

10.2 The Process of Cell Division
1 Review What are chromosomes Compare and Contrast How does the structure of chromosomes differ in prokaryotes and eukaryotes 2 Review What happens during.
Ways Cells Divide.
Section 10.2 (Pg ): The Process of Cell Division
Chapter 8 Miss Colabelli Biology CPA
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. CHAPTER 10.
Chapter 12: The Cell Cycle (How do cells divide?)
Cellular Reproduction
10.2 The Process of Cell Division
10.2 The Process of Cell Division
The Cell Cycle Chapter 12. Mitosis  Cell division  Produce 2 daughter cells  Same genetic information.
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.
The Cell Cycle and Cellular Reproduction Chapter 9.
Chapter 12 The Cell Cycle.
The Cell Cycle and Mitosis
How Cells Divide Chapter 11.
This cycle consists of three phases: G1, S, G2
10 – 2 Cell Division Mitosis. Chromosomes DNA is passed on in chromosomes DNA is passed on in chromosomes Every organism has a specific # of chromosomes:
10.2 The Process of Cell Division
Cell Division and Mitosis Chapter 10. Prokaryotic Cell Division Bacterial cells reproduce by Binary Fission Much simpler process than in eukaryotic organisms.
Cell Division Mitosis. Chromosomes  Eukaryotes  Found in the nucleus  Contain most of the genes  Made up of two sister chromatids, joined by a centromere.
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.
Ch. 10 Cell Growth and Division. Chapter 10 Outline 10-1: Cell Growth –Limits to Cell Growth –Division of the Cell 10-2: Cell Division –Chromosomes –The.
SC- B-2.6: Summarize the characteristics of the cell cycle: interphase;the phases of mitosis, and plant & animal cytokinesis.
1 How Cells Divide Chapter Outline Cell Division in Prokaryotes Discovery of Chromosomes Structure of Chromosomes Phases of the Cell Cycle Interphase.
How Cells Divide – Mitosis and Meiosis
CELL CYCLE CHAPTER 12. Figure 12.0 Mitosis Figure 12.1a The functions of cell division: Reproduction.
Cell Division. Multicellular life starts as a single cell Growth, development and reproduction require cells to divide and replicate themselves.
10.2 The Process of Cell Division
Cell Division and Mitosis
THE CELL CYCLE AND MITOSIS UNIT 3 ORGANIZATION AND DEVELOPMENT.
How Cells Divide Chapter Bacterial Cell Division Bacteria divide by binary fission: -the single, circular bacterial chromosome is replicated; -replication.
What do you, an octopus and a large oak have in common????? All made up of cells about trillion actually Cell Division: Mitosis.
You are performing mitosis. Where is this occurring? Describe what is happening.
How Cells Divide Chapter 10.
The Cell Cycle. When do cells divide? Reproduction Replacement of damaged cells Growth of new cells In replacement and growth cell divisions how should.
Cell Division and Reproduction. Before a cell becomes too large, it divides forming 2 “daughter” cells. This process is called cell division. It keeps.
11 Chapter 10 Cell Growth & Division –1 Cell Growth Which has larger cells: an adult elephant or a baby elephant? Neither! They are the same size.
Chapter 10 Cell Growth Cell Growth Living things grow by producing more cells. Cells of an adult are the same size as the cells of a baby, adults.
Chapter 12 The Cell Cycle.
SC- B-2.6: Summarize the characteristics of the cell cycle: interphase;the phases of mitosis, and plant & animal cytokinesis.
Cell Cycle Notes Chapter 8. Division of the Cell  Cell division forms two identical “daughter” cells.  Before cell division occurs, the cell replicates.
Cell Division & Cell Cycle. Reproduction.
Mitosis Chapter 12. Mitosis  Cell division  Produce 2 daughter cells  Same genetic information  Genome.
10.2 The Process of Cell Division
Lesson Overview Lesson Overview The Process of Cell Division Lesson Overview 10.2 The Process of Cell Division.
Cell Cycle and Cancer. What you need to know Structure of chromosome and chromatin Phases of the cell cycle Stages of Mitosis Differences in plant and.
Cell Division and Mitosis Ch. 5. God’s Command to Nature Genesis God created all living things and gave them a command: “Be fruitful and multiply, fill.
Lesson Overview Lesson Overview The Process of Cell Division Lesson Overview 10.2 The Process of Cell Division.
Cell Cycle and Cell Division Chapter 9 Cellular Reproduction Chapter 9 Slides Part 1 Text Pages
Chapter 10 How Cells Divide Prokaryotes vs Eukaryotes Prokaryotes divide by binary fission (simple dividing into two equal halves) DNA copy is made.
Chapter 12. Genetic Material  Typical cell is ~2 m in length (~250,000x’s the length of the cell) Total genetic material (DNA) in the cell is it’s genome.
CELL CYCLE The events in the life of a cell. Interphase Interphase is the time between cell divisions where the cell grows to full size, duplicates its.
Cell Cycle *Cellular Division. Reproduction ●Asexual reproduction: generates offspring that are genetically identical to a single parent. Requires only.
The Cell Cycle & Cell Division
 Chapter 12~ The Cell Cycle. 3 Key Roles of Cell Division  Reproduction  Growth and development  Tissue renewal and repair.
The Process of Cell Division (10.2)
The Cell cycle Chapter 12.
The Cell Cycle Chapter 12 Unit 4.
The Cell cycle Chapter 12.
Cell Growth and Division
How Cells Divide.
The Process of Cell Division
The Cell cycle Chapter 12.
How Cells Divide-Mitosis
CHAPTER 10 CELL GROWTH AND DIVISION
10.2 The Process of Cell Division
Presentation transcript:

Cell Division Chapter 11 AP

Division in Prokaryotes Binary Fission – Lack a nucleus – Circular DNA attached to plasma membrane – At replication site 22 proteins begin replication – When complete, daughter DNAs attached to PM next to each other – Plasma membrane grows between DNA until divided in two

Eukaryotic Chromosomes Discovered during mitosis Varied number between organisms – Primitive plant (fern) has 500 pairs, but advanced flowering plant has 1 pair Humans have 23 almost identical pairs – Loss of one chromosome = monosomy (usually death) – Gain of one chromosome = trisomy (sometimes death or developmental problems)

Structure of Chromosomes Chromatin – Complex of DNA and protein Chromosome – Composed of chromatin – Long unbroken strands of DNA – Can contain 140 million nucleotides – Super-super-super-coiled

Supercoiling “String-of-beads” – Every 200 nucleotides is wrapped around 8 histone proteins = nucleosome DNA attracted to histones by opposite charge (“+” histones to “-” phosphates) – Heterochromatin Highly condensed chromatin that does not uncoil, thus is never expressed – Euchromatin Condensed only during cell division, but is uncoiled when not dividing so genes can be expressed

Karyotypes Particular array of chromosomes for an individual Chromosomes differ from each other within the same cell – Size – Staining properties – Location of centromere – Length of arms on either side of centromere To view karyotype – Induce cell division, stop cell division, lyse cells, stain chromosomes, take picture, cut out, then order largest to smallest

Phases of Cell Cycle Phases – Interphase G 1 phase: primary growth – G 0 phase: resting phase S phase: synthesis of entire genome G 2 phase: prep for cell division – (M) Mitosis Prophase Metaphase Anaphase Telophase – (C) Cytokinesis—division of cytoplasm

Duration of Cell Cycle Cell cycle lengths – Most embryos = 20 minutes – Fruit fly embryo = 8 minutes – Dividing mammalian cell = 24 hours – Human liver = 1 year – M phase of cell cycle only about an hour for regular cells – Some cells enter G 0 phase for days to years before entering cellular division (some stay there indefinitely)

Interphase G 1 – Major cell growth – Occurs directly after cell division, so cell must get bigger and mature before dividing again – Protein synthesis S phase – Each chromosome is replicated producing two sister chromatids attached by a centromere G 2 – Second growth – Mitochondria and other organelles are replicated – Chromosomes are condensed (supercoiled) – Centrioles replicate (animal cells)

Mitosis Prophase – Formation of mitotic apparatus Begins as chromosomes become visible w/ light microscope Condensation continues – Assembling spindle apparatus Begins at end of G2 phase and continues into prophase Centrioles begin to move apart forming an axis of microtubules called spindle fibers – Bridge of spindle fibers called spindle apparatus – Also in plant cells, but no centrioles Nuclear envelope disappears – Microtubules from opposite poles begin to connect to kinetochores of sister chromatids

Mitosis (cont.) Metaphase – Chromosomes line up in center of cell at metaphase plate – Positioned by microtubules attached at kinetochores Anaphase – All centromeres divide at same time – Separates sister chromatids – Pulled apart to different poles – Poles themselves move apart – Centromeres move toward the poles

Mitosis (cont.) Telophase – Spindle apparatus disassembles – Nuclear envelope reassembles around each set of sister chromatids (chromosomes, now) – Chromosomes begin to uncoil – rRNA genes expressed and nucleolus will soon be reformed

Cytokinesis Mitosis over Nuclei at opposite ends of cell Actual cell division not over until two new daughter cells separate = cytokinesis Involves cleavage of cell into two equal halves In animal cells – Belt of actin filaments constricts and pinches creating a cleavage furrow. Constriction continues until cells separate

Cytokinesis In plant cells – Cell wall too rigid to be pinched – Assemble membrane components from within – Called cell plate – Cellulose then placed between two new membranes making cell wall In fungi and protists – When mitosis is complete, nucleus divides into daughter nuclei

Cell Cycle Control Need sufficient time for events to occur – Internal clock – End of last phase starts next phase – “go/no-go” switches Control system – Growth is assessed at G1 checkpoint Key decision whether cell should divide or not – If favorable, cell goes into S phase – If not, cell will continue to grow

Cell Cycle Control (cont.) – DNA replication success assessed at G2 checkpoint Problems with DNA synthesis are fixed If passes inspection cell will enter M phase – Mitosis assessed at M checkpoint At metaphase checkpoint initiates exit from mitosis and cytokinesis and beginning of G1

Mechanisms of Cell Control Cyclin control system – Cyclin-dependent protein kinases (Cdks) Phosphorylate particular amino acids in proteins important to cellular division This initiates the cell cycle past the checkpoint – G2 checkpoint is better understood G2 cyclin gradually increases Cyclin binds to Cdk forming MPF (mitosis promoting factor) As more MPF accumulates there is a positive feedback that phosphorylates more MPF The MPF threshold is reached and triggers mitosis and the end of G2

Mechanisms of Cell Control – MPF also activates proteins that destroy the very cyclin that started the whole process – As cyclin becomes less available to make MPF it initiates the end of mitosis G1 checkpoint – Less understood than G2 – Thought to be regulated like G2 – Cell size triggers DNA replication – Determinant for S phase is ratio of amount of cytoplasm to genome size – This triggers production of more cyclins, then triggering S and G2 phases

Cell Cycle in Eukaryotes To maintain organization, only certain cells can divide at certain times Cells use regulatory signals called growth factors Growth factors fit cell surface receptor – Some very specific, others not so specific – Many cells need many different types of growth factors in order to overcome the controls that inhibit cell division If cells do not get growth factors, they stop after G1 and go into G0 phase (non-growing stage)

Cancer Unrestrained, uncontrolled cell growth Read about the p53 gene Proto-oncogenes (must be turned on to cause cancer) – Genes that stimulate cell division – If damaged they lead to oncogenes (cancer) – myc, fos, jun myc expression prevents cell division even in presence of growth factors Tumor-suppressor genes (must be turned off or mutated to cause cancer—recessive: both copies must be bad) – Suppress cell division by preventing cyclins from binding to Cdk – If mutated, can lead to uncontrolled cell division, but is recessive – Read about retinoblastoma gene